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The name Benrus is well known.
When most people hear it they immediately think of watches.
However, very little is known about the Benrus Watch Company.
The company’s founder, Benjamin Lazrus, was a Jewish Romanian born
in 1894. He would eventually immigrate to the
United States
. Sometime before 1921, he
would open a watch repair shop located at 206 Broadway in
New York City
. Not long afterwards, he was making watch cases and bands.
To some small degree, his brothers were also involved in the
business. However, at this
time, I am not sure just exactly what that involvement was.
I have read that the Benrus Watch Company was started in the early
1920s. I don’t think this
is a completely accurate statement.
I believe that, until the late 1920s, Benjamin was simply selling
watch parts and cases. He registered the name Benrus (taken from Benjamin
& Lazrus) in 1922. In
1924, Benjamin was located on
Beekman Street
in
New York City
. Again, he is listed as an
importer and wholesaler, but not a manufacturer. His first
recorded appearance as an actual manufacturer of watch cases would not
be until the mid 1920s. By 1930, he has moved again & is now making
cases at
200 Hudson Street
. He also maintains a
“main” office, in the heart of the jewelry district, on
47th Street
.
You’ll notice that some people refer to Benrus as a Swiss company
while others say it an American company. This may be because; at
sometime in the 1920s, he also rented one floor of a watch factory
located in La Chaux-de-Fonds,
Switzerland
. Benjamin’s earliest watches were simple Schild movements that
were shipped to the
US
and put in to American made cases. His early cases are unmarked.
In order to understand why he needed a "factory" in
Switzerland
if he was simply buying movements there, one has to first understand the
Swiss watch industry at the time.
Ebauches is a name commonly used when referring to Swiss watches.
However, not many truly understand what an Ebauches movement was.
Basically it meant a movement that was not completed. They had no
balance assembly or escape wheel. Lazrus,
like many other companies, would purchase these Ebauches movements.
Then, his "factory" in
Switzerland
would complete the watch movements and ship them to his “factory” in
the
US
. Once the movements
arrived in
New York
they would be placed in Benrus watch cases.
The company also purchased dials and hands from various Swiss companies
in the same manner. So, yes, all of the movements used by Benrus from
the 1920s up to the 1960s were Swiss. However,
they made their watch cases in the
US
for over 40 years. In
fact, you will see Benrus listed as “The Benrus Watch CASE Company”
in many old records.
By the mid 1930s, Benrus was beginning to produce a few watches that
actually had a little "personality". Their early rectangular
and cushion watches were starting to show some style.
This helped to pull the company away from all the others &
enabled them to start “standing out” in the crowd. Fortunately (or
unfortunately, depending on how you look at it) this would not be the
only factor that pushed Benrus ahead in the watch industry.
With the outbreak of World War II the other American watch companies
(such as
Waltham
,
Elgin
and
Hamilton
) were pressed in to service & required to make watches for the US
Military. Some of the watch
companies also had to “re-outfit” in order to make other goods
(completely unrelated to watches) required by the war effort.
Since Benrus had neither a watch movement factory nor the
machinery needed for it here in the
US
, they were not required to do this. They
managed to continue bringing Swiss watch movements into the
US
during the war and were able to keep selling their own watches. This
gave them a great advantage when the war ended.
It was during the 1940s that Benrus produced some of their best
watches. The most notable of these would have to be their infamous
calendar watch which was introduced in the late 1940s. This was a manual
wind watch that featured a “window” in the dial to show the month
and a “hand indicated date” that had the days of the month running
around the outside of the dial. The date would advance as you pushed the
crown in. This would turn out to be the most mass produced
“complicated” watch of all time.
In the 1950s Benrus would introduce some of their most innovative
watches. Their Dial-a-rama
watch was a futuristic version of the old jump hour watches of the
1930s. The Dial-a-rama used the old technology of the jump hour but
added a star wheel or “seconds” wheel in the center.
They also had windows in the dial to show the hour and minutes.
The earlier jump hours only had windows in the case. It was also
during this period that Benrus introduced a watch with a “winding
indicator”. This feature
would tell you how much the mainspring was wound without actually
winding the watch. The
Benrus alarm watch, also introduced in the 1950s, probably outsold every
other brand of alarm watch being marketed at the same time.
Benrus Watch Company was very quickly changing.
They went from being just another boring old watch company to one
that was now continually introducing more and more complicated, “state
of the art” watches. In fact, they became so big in the 1950s that
they almost bought out the Hamilton Watch Company.
Through the years Benrus would continue to introduce new &
innovative watches. Many of
them had interesting or unusual features.
Anyone familiar with Benrus watches most likely knows that they
sold a lot of watches in waterproof cases. These cases had a 2 piece
winding stems and a 2 piece case. They
had to be put in a “press” in order to open or close them. This 2
piece waterproof case was later replaced with a one piece "drop
in" style case. With
this style you had to remove the crystal in order to pull the movement
out through the front of the case.
Benrus also ventured in to clock making. One of their more
interesting clocks was a self winding automobile clock.
These clocks were mounted into the center of the car’s steering
wheel and the turning of the wheel would wind it. These were
factory accessories for Chrysler and other cars.
The first automatic watches that Benrus produced were
"bumper" style. They
had an oscillator that did not rotate around the watch.
Instead, it would swing part way until it hit a spring that would
bounce it back. Later the modern style automatic replaced the bumper.
In the 1960s Benrus also introduced 2 lower lines of watches -the
Belforte and the Sovereign. While most of the Belforte watches had
the same movements as the regular Benrus line, the Sovereign seemed to
always have lower quality movements. It appears that Benrus actually
spent some money advertising the Belforte watches.
I have several ads including some featuring comedian Jerry Lewis.
I don't think many of us are really going to believe Jerry actually wore
a Belforte watch on a regular basis but I guess it looked good at the
time.
Technipower was another one of the Benrus “off-shoots”. They made
electronic parts & the name Technipower appears on some of their
electronic watches. Technipower (Benrus) also made missile guidance
components and one of the Benrus plants actually had a missile on
display. Long after the plant closed, this “display” missile was
found in the basement of someone’s house.
The bomb squad was called in only to find out that it was a
“dummy” with nothing inside it. So, it appears that Benrus did
finally get to do their part for the war effort.
Most movements for the early Benrus Electronic watches were made in
Switzerland
. Some were also made by Lip
in
France
. At some point in the 1970s they switched to Seiko movements that
were made in
Japan
. It was around this same time, that Benrus would also begin using dials
made
Taiwan
instead of the Swiss dials.
The 1970s were a bad time for the entire watch making industry. Most
of the old Swiss companies either closed entirely or stopped
manufacturing movements. Instead,
they were now using ETA or Schild movements. Companies such as Omega and
Longines, who had always used their own distinct movements, also began
using Schild and ETA movements. This meant that regardless of which
brand of watch you bought it would probably have the same movement
inside. It would simply have
a slightly different look or finish on the outside.
This was also the time period when companies began using up
leftover ladies movements in their men’s watches. It simply wasn’t
economical to just throw them away.
The competition, created by these cheap electric watches, hurt
everyone including Benrus. In
order to stay competitive, they also began using cheaper movements and
ladies movements. They introduced the Destino line in the 1970s in
order to sell cheap fashion watches. It continued this way through out
the 70s until they eventually became just a watch “name”.
They were no longer a manufacturer in any sense of the word. They
were simply having their name put on watches that they bought from other
companies. The company has changed hands several times in the last 30
years. They now sell a line
of quartz watches.
The Swiss like to point to Benrus and call them a Swiss watch company. While
they did use Swiss movements for the first 40 years the cases were
always made in the
USA
, at least until the 70s. I think a better description would be that
Benrus was an American company that used Swiss movements.