Departments

|
  |
| |
 |

Men's Timex Easy Reader Watch With Brown
Leather Strap

Item#
T20011


Men's Timex With
Black Dial

Item#
T26481


Men's Timex
Casual Watch With Round Dial And Leather Strap

Item#
T29871


Men's Timex Expedition
Metal Field Watch

Item#
T44381


Men's Timex
Ironman Combo 42-Lap Watch

Item#
T56381


Men's Timex
Triathlon 8-Lap Sport Watch

Item#
T62951

|
 |
 |
 |

Men's Timex Easy Reader Watch With
Stainless
Steel Expansion Band

Item#
T20461


Men's Timex
Watch With Square Black Dial

Item#
T27791


Men's Timex Easy Reader Watch With
Gold
Tone Expansion Band

Item#
T2H301


Men's Timex
Expedition Traditional Watch

Item#
T46681


Men's Ironman
Shock Resistant 30-Lap Sport Watch

Item#
T56442

|
 |
 |
 |

Men's Timex Dress Watch With
Stainless
Steel Expansion Band

Item#
T26461


Men's Timex Causal
Watch With Leather Strap

Item#
T29391


Men's Timex
Perpetual Calendar Watch

Item#
T41841


Men's Timex
Mid-Sized Expedition Sports Watch

Item#
T47852


Men's Timex
Ironman Sleep 150-Lap Digital Sports Watch

Item#
T5B561

|
 |
 |
 |

Women's Timex
Fashion Watch With Blue Dial

Item#
T26471


Men's Timex
Dress Watch With Two Tone Bracelet

Item#
T29691


Men's Timex
Expedition Sports Watch

Item#
T43101


Men's Timex
Expedition Chrono-Alarm Timer Watch

Item#
T48042


Men's Timex
Ironman 100-Lap Flix Sports Watch

Item#
T5E231

|
| |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
Prev
ï
ð Home
The Timex
Corporation
|
1850s-1870s: Waterbury Clock
made timekeeping affordable for working class Americans. Its
inexpensive yet reliable shelf and mantel clocks, with cases
designed to imitate expensive imported models, contained simple,
mass-produced stamped brass movements. Waterbury Clock's
products grew out of a long tradition of innovative clockmaking
that developed in Connecticut's Naugatuck Valley, known during
the nineteenth century as the "Switzerland of America."
1880s:
Waterbury Watch, a sister company, manufactured the first
inexpensive mechanical pocket watch in 1880 and quickly sold
more than any other firm in the world. The "Waterbury," known
for its extraordinarily long, nine-foot mainspring, was
assembled by a predominantly female workforce whose dexterous
fingers were prized for the close and exacting work. Waterbury
pocket watches sold throughout North America and Europe, and
could be found in Africa, where they were presented as gifts to
native chieftains, and as far away as Japan.
1900s:
By the turn of the twentieth century, the watch industry's first
and most successful mass marketer, Robert H. Ingersoll, worked
with Waterbury Clock to distribute the company's "Yankee" pocket
watch, the first to cost just one dollar. Twenty years later,
with nearly forty million sold, the "Yankee" became the world's
largest seller and "the watch that made the dollar famous."
Everyone carried the Yankee: from Mark Twain to miners, from
farmers to factory workers, from office clerks to sales clerks.
1917:
During World War I, the U.S. Army required Waterbury Clock to
re-tool the Yankee pocket watch into a convenient new
"wristwatch" for soldiers; after the war, returning veterans
continued to wear the handy timepiece, and civilians took them
up in huge numbers during the 1920s.
1930s:
The popularity of a brand new cartoon character led Waterbury
Clock to produce the very first Mickey Mouse clocks and watches
in 1933, under an exclusive license from Walt Disney. Despite
the deep shadow cast by the Great Depression, within just a few
years, parents bought two million Mickey Mouse watches for their
children. Originally priced at $1.50, these same watches are
collector's items that today command higher and higher prices.
1940s:
During World War II, the newly renamed U.S. Time Company
completely converted its factories to wartime manufacturing.
Over the course of the war, it turned an eighty-four year
tradition of reliable mechanical timekeeping to the
record-breaking production of more high-quality
mechanically-timed artillery and anti-aircraft fuses than any
other Allied source.
1950s:
U.S. Time's wartime expertise in research
and development and advanced mass production techniques led to
the creation of the world's first inexpensive yet utterly
reliable mechanical watch movement. The new wristwatch, called
the Timex, debuted in 1950. Print advertisements featured the
new watch strapped to Mickey Mantle's bat, frozen in an ice cube
tray, spun for seven days in a vacuum cleaner, taped to a giant
lobster's claw, or wrapped around a turtle in a tank. Despite
these and other extensive live torture tests, the Timex kept
ticking. When John Cameron Swayze, the most authoritative
newsman of his time, began extolling the Timex watch in live
"torture test" commercials of the late 1950s, sales took off.
Taped to the propeller of an outboard motor, tumbling over the
Grand Coulee Dam, or held fist first by a diver leaping
eighty-seven feet from the Acapulco cliffs, the plucky watch
that "takes a licking and keeps on ticking®" quickly caught the
American imagination. Viewers by the thousands wrote in with
their suggestions for future torture tests, like the Air Force
sergeant who offered to crash a plane while wearing a Timex. By
the end of the 1950s, one out of every three watches bought in
the U.S. was a Timex.
1960s:
The Timex brand name became a household word during the 1960s.
Having completely conquered the low-priced market, the company
upgraded and diversified its product line. It introduced the
"Cavatina," its first women's brand in 1959 and with it, a
revolutionary merchandising concept: the watch as an impulse
item. For the price of one expensive watch, women could buy
several Timex watches to match different occasions or ensembles.
Technological advances allowed the company to offer a wide range
of products, including the first low-priced electric watches for
men and women, as well as several other, inexpensive jeweled
models. Still another improved watch movement, introduced in
1961, served as the cornerstone for an extraordinary array of
men's wristwatches.
1970s:
By the mid-1970s, the renamed Timex Corporation had sold more
than 500 million of these mechanical movements. At this time,
every other watch bought in the U.S. was a Timex, and the brand
retailed in two hundred and fifty thousand different outlets.
None of these manufacturing, sales, and distribution records has
ever been duplicated by another watch manufacturer.
1980s:
Alone among all domestic watchmakers, only Timex survived the
brutal 1970s watch industry shakeout caused by new digital watch
technology and fierce price competition from the Far East.
Having gradually phased out mechanical watch production in favor
of digital watches, in 1986 Timex introduced its "Ironman
Triathlon®," jointly devised by serious athletes and industrial
designers. Within a year, the "Ironman Triathlon®" became
America's best-selling watch and, diversifying into a full line
for men and women, became the world's largest selling sports
watch, a distinction it has held throughout the 1990s.
1990s and Beyond:
In the 1990s, a nearly 150 year-old Timex vigorously pursues its
long tradition of technological innovation and market
leadership. The company introduced the industry's first
electroluminescent watch face in 1992, when the blue-green
Indiglo® night light appeared on some of its digital and analog
watches. Today, more than 75 percent of all Timex watches are
equipped with the Indiglo night light®. The All-Day Indiglo®
display, using a hologram-like material, provides greater
contrast between digital numbers and the display background. In
1994, Timex introduced the Data Link® watch, a sophisticated
wrist instrument that carries scheduling, phone numbers, and
other personal information, having collaborated with Microsoft
to create the necessary software to communicate the data from
computer to watch. In 1998, Timex pioneered its i-Control™ turn
n pull analog alarm watch and, in a joint venture with Motorola,
a new wrist pager called Beepwear®.
Timex embraces the new millenium with high brand confidence and
a strong global workforce. Annual surveys consistently rank
Timex as number one out of fifty fashion brands in jewelry and
accessories and the third most popular of all women's accessory
brands. Seventy-five hundred employees are located on four
continents: in Middlebury (next door to Waterbury), Connecticut;
Little Rock, Arkansas; Manaus, Brazil; Besancon, France;
Pforzheim, Germany; Cebu, the Philippines; People's Republic of
China; Jerusalem, Israel; and Delhi, India. |
|
|
|