
The Lancaster 135 (43mm)
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What Makes The Lancaster 135 Unique: The Lancaster 135 is a study in restraint. Built around a 17-jewel Hamilton Grade 917 movement manufactured in 1939, this watch captures a moment when American watchmaking was shifting toward cleaner, more refined designs while maintaining the mechanical standards that had made Hamilton one of the countrys most respected manufacturers. The result is a watch whose appeal grows stronger the longer it is examined. The dial immediately establishes the character of the piece. Unlike many antique pocket watch dials that rely on bold railroad styling or heavily decorated layouts, this example embraces simplicity. The warm ivory dial serves as a quiet backdrop for applied gold-tone Arabic numerals that have developed a subtle softness with age. Their slightly raised construction creates depth across the dial surface, while the combination of gilt numerals and matching hands gives the watch a cohesive elegance that feels distinctly late-1930s. Collectors will likely notice the handset almost immediately. The ornate spade-style hour hand paired with the long tapered minute hand provides a level of visual sophistication that separates this watch from more utilitarian examples. The contrast between the darker aged hour hand and the brighter gilt minute hand creates an appearance that feels entirely authentic to a watch that has lived nearly a century of history. Together with the recessed sub-seconds register at 6 oclock, the dial achieves a balance that feels deliberate and highly refined. Turning the watch over reveals one of the strongest features of the Lancaster 135: its Hamilton Grade 917 movement. Produced during an era when Hamilton was regarded as one of Americas premier manufacturers of precision timekeeping instruments, the Grade 917 was designed to deliver dependable performance while maintaining a level of finishing that collectors continue to admire today. The movement displays broad Geneva-style striping across the bridges, polished screw heads, gold jewel settings, and the distinctive spiral-pattern winding wheel that has become a recognizable hallmark of many Hamilton movements from this period. The exposed balance assembly provides constant mechanical motion beneath the crystal caseback, offering a reminder that every component visible here was manufactured and assembled decades before the arrival of modern electronic timekeeping. As a 17-jewel movement adjusted to three positions, the Grade 917 occupied an imp


