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Durchmesser 35 mm ohne Krone.
Zu HELVETIA;
On the 14th April 1892 the Swiss watch
company Louis Brandt & Frere registered the name 'Helvetia' as one of the brand names for their watches. Two years later in 1894 they also registered the name 'Omega' and applied it to a new range of high quality lever movement pocket watches they had developed using cutting edge manufacturing technology.
So successful were the new Omega watches that the Brandt brothers decided to form a new company alongside Louis Brandt & Frere and move the production of some of their other watches to it to in order to make extra room in their Bienne factory to allow increased production of Omega watches.
On the 5th August 1895 the new company
'Société d'Horlogerie La Générale' was formed in La Chaux de-Fonds as a joint venture the directors being Louis Paul Brandt, Edouard Boillat of the ébauche company Ed. Boillat & Cie and initially Louis Courvoisier though he resigned in 1897. 1897 was also the year that the company was additionally registered under its English name, 'General Watch Co', and moved its registered office to Bienne.
Following the founding of La Générale production of most of Louis Brandt & Frere's lower quality cylinder watches were moved there including the brands Helvetia, Paradox, Jura, Gurzelen and Cosmopolite.
La Générale watches were often marked on the dial and case 'La Générale, Successeur de Louis Brandt & Frere' and it looks as if the Brandts were using the pull of their famous name to move the customers of their non-Omega watches over to La Générale allowing them to concentrate on Omega. Indeed,
In 1972 Montres Helvetia Société d'Horlogerie La Générale officially changed its name to Montres Helvetia S.A. dropping the name La Générale or General Watch Co. that it had retained since its formation in
1895. Another company named the General Watch Holding Co. had been formed the year before as part of AUSAG. This was a completely different company that had no links with La Générale or Helvetia but possibly Helvetia thought it best to avoid confusion by dropping the La Générale part of its name.
At the annual general meeting of Helvetia
S.A. on 16th February 1973 it was decided to dissolve the company! This was not the end for the Helvetia name however as on the same day Silvana S.A. held its own annual general meeting, and Silvana S.A. changed its name to Helvetia S.A.