June 18, 2006, 18:26
Laurie MorseLadies 1915 Waltham Necklace Watch
Is there somewher to research aprox. values on this watch? The works are 22194698, it has 7 jewels. The number on the case is 6785193. The date is specific it says: Pat. May 11, 1915 made for Waltham Philadelphia Watch Case Co. Any help or direction would be truly appreciated.
June 18, 2006, 20:29
Tom HuberLaurie, These are very nice watches, but in the collecting community, there is not much interest by collectors in the small watches like yours unless the watch is in a fancy or unique solid gold case. Yours looks like a gold filled case--I might be wrong. Your watch is from the 1920 timeframe. It was designed and meant to be a jewelry item for a lady. The 7 jewel movement is reliable as a timekeeper, but was considered an inexpensive movement.
With any collectable, the value is a matter of suply and demand. With your watch there is not much demand by collectors, and watches like this are out there in abundance. Therefore as a collectable, it would not command much value. Your best bet is to consider it a piece of jewelry. The value would probably increase. The nice chain with the slide is probably worth as much or more than the watch. I do know that recently, I have seen watches like yours for sale at marts in running condition, without a chain, and they were priced in the $20 range.
Hope this helps.
Tom
June 18, 2006, 21:29
Mark CrossIt also depends entirely on WHERE you find these watches for sale. I saw one exactly like yours in Murfreesboro, TN yesterday in a large antique store for $275. I'm sure they'll never get that for the watch....but at least someone thinks they have a chance...so you never know.

Regards! Mark
June 19, 2006, 16:59
Jerry TreimanThe May 11, 1915 patent refers specifically to the "hidden eye" that folds into the bottom of the case. When folded in, the watch was worn as a pendant or lapel watch. Folded out, the eyelet served as an attachment for the other end of a wrist strap (usually a ribbon). These appear in both solid gold and gold-filled cases. They appear to have been almost exclusively used on Waltham watches.
June 22, 2006, 20:55
Laurie MorseThank you all for your help. Very good information and appreciate you taking the time to respond.