Glycine Watch SA, or simply Glycine (/ˈɡlsn/ ), is a Swiss watchmaker founded in 1914 in Biel/Bienne (BE), Switzerland, where its manufacturing and headquarters remain today. In 1930, Glycine released the first mass-produced automatic watches, and in 1959, it developed vacuum-sealed cases, allowing for more durable and water-resistant timepieces. The Glycine Airman, the first watch capable of tracking two 24-hour time zones, has been used extensively in commercial and military aviation, as well as in spaceflights; notable examples include its use by United States Air Force pilots during the Vietnam War and astronaut Pete Conrad during the Gemini 5 and Gemini 11 spaceflights.

Glycine Watch SA
Formerly
  • La Glycine (1914–1916)
  • Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine, Piccola et Joffrette (1916–1923)
  • Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine (1922–1963)
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryWatchmaking
Founded1914; 110 years ago (1914) in Biel/Bienne, Switzerland
FounderEugène Meylan
HeadquartersRing 18
CH-2502 Biel/Bienne
Switzerland
47°08′30″N 7°14′47″E / 47.141791°N 7.246484°E / 47.141791; 7.246484
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
ProductsWatches
ParentInvicta Watch Group
Websiteglycine-watch.ch

History

edit

1891–1940: Early history

edit
 
Eugène Meylan[2]

Eugène Meylan was born in 1891 in Le Chenit, Switzerland,[3] and attended watchmaking school at School Of Arts Appliqués (Ecole d'arts appliqués) in La Chaux-de-Fonds from 1910 to 1911. Meylan was noted to be a gifted student, receiving top rating for a watch he submitted to the COSC while a student. In 1914, at age 23, Meylan established his watch company La Glycine in Biel/Bienne.[2] Two years later, watchmakers Piccola and Joffrette became co-owners of the company and La Glycine became Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine, Piccola et Joffrette.[3] In the 1920s, the watch company mostly made pocket watches[4] and women's watches that were known for their interchangeable components, allowing them to be serviced more easily than the competition. In 1922, the company and its factory were sold to Pretto Watch Company owner Ferdinand Engel and watchmaker George Flury and was renamed Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine.[5]

Development of automatic watches

edit
 
Illustration attached to Meylan's automatic module patent[6]

With the original patent for self-winding watches set to expire in the early 1930s,[3] Meylan (founder of Glycine but no longer affiliated with the company) began working on his own self-winding mechanism and formed the company Automatic E.M.S.A. (Eugène Meylan Société Anonyme). Meylan's automatic watch design was unusual: a separate module that could be used with nearly any 8.75 ligne (19.74 millimeter) watch movement. Meylan applied for a series of patents for his design in 1930. Later that year in October, Glycine, in collaboration with Meylan's new company,[5] manufactured the first mass-produced automatic watches,[3] allowing it to survive the global depression in the 1930s, that caused many Swiss watchmakers to close shop.[7]

1941–1960

edit

In 1942, Glycine's in-house movement was acquired by ASUAG, an entity created by the Swiss government during the Great Depression to preserve Swiss watchmaking. (In the 1980s, through a series of mergers, ASUAG became part of The Swatch Group,[8] a Swiss conglomerate consisting of numerous watchmakers, including Omega, Longines, and Hamilton.)[9] ASUAG's funding combined with Glycine's craftsmen allowed ASUAG to produce the first bi-directional winding rotor. Also in 1942, Glycine owner Ferdinand Engel died,[2] and the company was turned over to Charles Hertig of the Altus Watch Company. (Altus and Glycine merged in 1963.)[5] During World War II, Glycine received an order for watches from the German army for its land forces; Glycine complied, and its watches were issued to German soldiers.[2]

Vacuum-sealed case

edit

In 1959, Hans Ulrich Klingenberg, working for Glycine, developed the vacuum-sealed watch case.[10] His design featured a one-piece case with a flat crystal, held against a thick gasket ring by bezel clamps, and an oversized crown with three round gaskets. This provided an airless environment inside the watch, preventing lubrication from drying out and preventing condensation from entering the case, allowing for more durable watches and less service requirements. A separate device was included to allow the vacuum seal to be re-established every three to five years.[11] The patent for vacuum casing (CH 355742) was applied in 1959 and issued in 1961.[10]

"In a Vacuum: A watch that never needs cleaning or lubrication and is permanently air-, water-, dust-, and corrosion-proof has been developed by Glycine Watch Factory, Inc., of Bienne, Switzerland. The watch’s precision movement operates in a near vacuum, sealed within a metal case and crystal from which the air has been removed."[12]

Newsweek, 1961

The Airman

edit
 
U.S. Air Force pilot during the Vietnam War wearing a Glycine Airman[13]

The Airman debuted in 1953 and was designed by Glycine with full consultation from the U.S. Air Force and made available at exchange stores on military bases. Its design allowed servicemen to simultaneously know the time at home and the local time while in combat.[7] The Airman featured a date function, as well as a 24-hour dial and engraved, rotating 24-hour bezel with locking mechanism that allowed capability to tell time in two different time zones.[14] Shortly after its military success, the Airman obtained civilian success with the emergence of commercial intercontinental flights, as jet-setters sought a watch able to simultaneously tell home time and destination time.[7]

1961–1980

edit

Murder of Glycine founder

edit

On September 24, 1955, the body of Glycine founder Eugène Meylan, age 64, was found stoned to death in a remote path east of Neuchâtel, Switzerland. Leading up to his death, Meylan was bankrupt and left his Geneva home for Neuchâtel for unknown reasons. Edouard Glatz, a mechanic apprentice, confessed to killing Meylan. Glatz claimed he drank a pint of wine at an establishment with Meylan and accompanied Meylan to a train station, where Meylan planned to take the first train to Zürich. According to Glatz, the station had not yet opened and the pair took off on an obscure path to wait. Glatz admitted he punched Meylan to the ground, kicked him in the head, stoned him to death, and robbed him. In January 1956, Glatz was found guilty of murder and sentenced to five months in prison.[15]

Gemini spaceflights and Boeing

edit
 
Conrad suiting up for Gemini 11 with an Airman on his right arm[16]

Astronaut Pete Conrad wore his Glycine Airman for the 1965 Gemini 5 spaceflight and again in 1966 for Gemini 11. The capsule used in the Gemini 11 spaceflight featured an open-cockpit design, exposing Conrad and his wrist to outer space during his colleague's 2 hour and 41 minute spacewalk, making Conrad's Airman the first automatic watch flown in and exposed to outer space.[17]

Through a relationship with Boeing,[7] Glycine introduced the Airman SST in 1967, inspired by supersonic transport aircraft. It featured a tonneau-shaped case, orange dial, and internal rotating bezel.[14] Due to their orange dials, the watches are referred to as pumpkins by some collectors.[18]

The quartz crisis

edit

During the 1970s, many Swiss watchmakers struggled with the emergence of battery-operated quartz watches, which were more affordable and accurate than mechanical watches. During the quartz crisis, many Swiss watchmakers eventually disappeared, became bankrupt, or were sold off to conglomerates. Glycine adapted by debuting its own quartz watches, including digital models with LED screens. Glycine's LED watches were made possible through Ditronic, a collaboration with four other Swiss watchmakers, formed in an effort to stay afloat during the quartz crisis.[2]

1981–present: New ownership

edit
 
Airman Base 22 (ref. GL0208)

In 1984, Hans Brechbühler, a businessman in the watch industry, purchased Glycine.[19] Brechbühler's youngest daughter Katharina joined Glycine in 1992. Four years later, Glycine launched its first website.[2] In 2000, the father-and-daughter duo released the Airman 7; designed specifically for pilots in the United States with its "coast to coast"[7] concept, it was the first watch available with four time zones (for the four time zones of the contiguous United States).[7] Katharina assumed sole control of Glycine in 2005 with a goal to deprioritize quartz and focus largely on mechanical offerings.[7] After Hans Brechbühler died in 2010,[2] Katharina sold Glycine to Altus Uhren Holding AG; Katharina remained with the company to supervise design.[19] Under Altus, Glycine re-released the Airman in its original 36 millimeter case size as the Airman No. 1 and released a 60th anniversary Airman AM/PM model.[2]

“I joined at the height of the quartz crisis and it became our goal to strip everything back to the beginning, to the mechanical."[7]

Katharina Brechbühler, former owner of Glycine

 
A 36-millimeter variant of the Combat Sub (ref. GL0396)

In 2016, Invicta Watch Group purchased Glycine for an undisclosed amount,[20] with Invicta promising Glycine will maintain its independence while Invicta assists with marketing and distribution.[21] Leadership remained the same under Invicta as it did under Altus until 2019, when Invicta appointed Daniele Andreatta as Glycine's managing director.[2]

Patents

edit
  • 1917: Glycine's first patent—a wristwatch strap buckle clasp[22]
  • 1929: Patent for small, pill-shaped watch module that could fit into various cases[23]
  • 1930: Patent for a watch with window to display the date[24]
  • 1930: Eugène Meylan's patent for automatic modules for watches (not Glycine's, but Meylan's personal patent, used in Glycine's first automatic watches)[2][6]
  • 1931: Patent for a fold-out lever crown to set the time[25]
  • 1953: Patent for a 24-hour watch, used for the Airman[26]
  • 1955: Patent for a seconds hacking mechanism, invented by Georges Godat, and purchased by Glycine for its use in the Airman and Combat[2][27]
  • 1959: Glycine's patent for vacuum-sealed watch cases[10]
  • 1970: Glycine's final patent—a crown allowing the operator to regulate time[28]


Etymology

edit

In most languages, glycine refers to an amino acid; the watch company is named for the Wisteria genus of plant, known as fleur de Glycine in French. Katharina Brechbühler, owner of Glycine in the 2000s, claims the company's name is a result of its founding during the Jugendstil period, when plant-inspired motifs and floral designs were in fashion. Fleur de Glycine was chosen due to its vining growth structure found in a multitude of conditions, similar to Glycine watches, designed to tolerate a multitude of harsh conditions like diving and outer space. The plant flourishes without much care, like the reliable watches Glycine has strived to produce throughout its history.[14]

Glycine factory with fleur de Glycine growing on its exterior[14]
Fleur de Glycine, or Wisteria

Logo controversy

edit

In its early years, Glycine used a logo with two flags and "LG" initials for La Glycine and in the 1940s used a crest logo. In 1965, the company debuted its crown logo, and in 2015, added wings to the design to reference its historical ties to aviation.[2] Its crown logo with wings sparked a lawsuit from Giorgio Armani in 2017, claiming it was confusingly similar to its eagle logo. The Commercial Court of Bern ruled in favor of Armani; however, Glycine successfully appealed the decision. In 2019, the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland overturned the Bern court's decision, allowing Glycine to use its new logo;[29] despite this, Glycine returned to its original crown logo without wings later that year.[2]

Comparison of logos
Logo used until 1930
1940s logo
Current logo, debuted in 1965
Crown with wings; used briefly, sparking lawsuit from Armani
Giorgio Armani logo

References

edit
  1. ^ Gubagaras, Mark Anthony (May 3, 2019). "Evine Live gets investment from Invicta Watch Group, names new CEO". S&P Global. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kiris, Emre (2013). "Glycine Watches SA History & Timeline". Glycintennial. Retrieved August 16, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d Foskett, Stephen (July 19, 2021). "Eugène Meylan, Glycine, and the Fight Over the First Automatic Watch". Grail Watch. Retrieved August 15, 2022.
  4. ^ "A Glycine Watch to Convey Your Christmas Thoughts". The Washington Post. No. 18812. December 18, 1927. p. 34. Retrieved September 6, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c Foskett, Steven (July 19, 2021). "Eugène Meylan, Glycine, and the Fight Over the First Automatic Watch". Grail Watch. Retrieved August 15, 2022.
  6. ^ a b CH 149137, Meylan, Eugène, "Dipositif de remontage automatique de mouvement d'horlogerie", published October 15, 1930, issued November 11, 1931 
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Llewellyn, Tracey (2009). "Design for Life: Glycine" (PDF). QP Magazine. 1 (39): 87 – via QP Magazine Archive.
  8. ^ Staff writer(s) (June 28, 2010). "Swatch Group founder Nicolas Hayek dies at 82". Reuters. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  9. ^ Naas, Roberta (July 29, 2018). "Swatch Group Brands Quit Baselworld And What It Means For The Watch Industry". Forbes. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  10. ^ a b c CH 355742, Klingenberg, Hans Ulrich, "Verfahren zur Herstellung eines Uhrgehäuses und nach diesem Verfahren hergestelltes Uhrengehäuse", published June 23, 1959, issued August 31, 1961, assigned to Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine 
  11. ^ Hailwood, Adrian (December 26, 2019). "The Vacuum Watch You May Never Have Heard Of…". Revolution Watch. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  12. ^ "What's Newest". Newsweek. Vol. 58, no. 15. October 9, 1961. p. 88. Retrieved September 6, 2022.
  13. ^ Hartov, Oren (April 17, 2018). "The PX Watches of Vietnam: A Survey of Non-Issued, Popular Military Watches of the Vietnam War". Worn & Wound. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  14. ^ a b c d Stikkers, Andre (2014). Glycine Airman Book - Play it again Sam! Airman History and Overview (3rd ed.). The Netherlands: Adr. Heinen. pp. 15, 66. ISBN 9789086801572.
  15. ^ "L'affaire du Mail" [The Circle]. Der Kreis (in French). Vol. 1956, no. 5. Zürich. May 1956. pp. 29–31. doi:10.5169/seals-569258. Retrieved May 7, 2024.
  16. ^ Gerber, Ben (August 17, 2015). "Glycine Airman in Space". 24hourWatch. Retrieved August 13, 2022.
  17. ^ Pennington, Cole (May 5, 2021). "Eight Space Watches That Aren't The Speedmaster Professional". Hodinkee. Retrieved August 13, 2022.
  18. ^ "Vintage Watches: A 1970s Porsche Design By Orfina, A 1972 Rolex GMT-Master, And A 1978 Tudor Submariner". Hodinkee. October 28, 2020. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
  19. ^ a b "Glycine". Vintage Watch, Inc. November 29, 2020. Retrieved August 16, 2022.
  20. ^ "BRIEF-DKSH Holding sells Glycine Watch company to Invicta Watch Group". Reuters. August 11, 2016. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
  21. ^ Ryvin, Ilya (September 13, 2016). "Under Invicta, Glycine Promises to Focus on Airman and Combat Lines". Worn and Wound. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  22. ^ CH 77684, Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine, "Riemenschloß", published August 27, 1917, issued September 16, 1918 
  23. ^ CH 143069, Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine, "Movement de montre de forme, plus particulièrement de forme bagnette", published October 31, 1930, issued January 2, 1931 
  24. ^ CH 148534, Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine, "Montre bracelet à guichets", published July 31, 1931, issued October 1, 1931 
  25. ^ CH 159200, Fabrique d’Horlogerie La Glycine, "Dispositif de mise à l'heure pour montre à remontage automatique", published October 19, 1931, issued March 16, 1933 
  26. ^ CH 314050, Hans-Werner-Samuel Glur et Charles Hertig, Evilard, "Montre 24 heures", published December 2, 1953, issued July 14, 1956 
  27. ^ CH 323980, Godat, Georges, "Montre munie d'une aiguille des secondes", published March 17, 1955, issued October 15, 1957 
  28. ^ CH 538135, Courtemaîche, Denis Maillard, "Dispositif de réglage de la raquette d'un mouvement de montre actionnable de l'extérieur de la boîte", published April 1, 1970, issued July 31, 1973, assigned to Fabriques d'Horlogerie Glycine and Altus SA 
  29. ^ O'Neill, Rory (July 18, 2019). "Armani hit with TM defeat by top Swiss court". World Intellectual Property Review. Retrieved September 12, 2022.
edit