- Aaron Lufkin Dennison
Aaron Lufkin Dennison (
March 6 ,1812 –January 9 ,1895 ) was an Americanwatchmaker born inFreeport, Maine .Life
Upon a three year
apprenticeship with James Cary, he went to work as a journeyman watchmaker in Boston in 1833. There he followed the advice ofTubal Hone , a fellow American watchmaker, and discovered inaccuracies in the workmanship and construction of even the best hand-madewatch es. He often visited the Springfield armory, predicting that the manufacture of watches would soon be reduced to as much system and perfection as the manufacture offirearm s. Around 1840 he invented theDennison Standard Gauge and then began to develop the "Interchangeable System" (theAmerican System of Watch Manufacturing ).Meanwhile, in 1844, Dennison, who was then also engaged in the
jewelry business in Boston, decided that he could make paper boxes better than theimport ed products. He bought supplies of box board and cover paper and took them to the family home inBrunswick, Maine , where his father, Col.Andrew Dennison , cut out the first boxes, and his sisters covered them. He developed the box business successfully, but five years later turned it over to his younger brother,Eliphalet Whorf Dennison , in order to pursue watch manufacturing. (The Dennison Manufacturing Company, inFramingham, Massachusetts , became theAvery Dennison Corporation with headquarters inPasadena, California , upon a merger in 1990).In 1849, Dennison partnered with the
clockmaker Edward Howard to manufacture interchangeable movement parts, to enhance quality and lower the price of watches. With capital frommirror manufacturer Samuel Curtis, they started in 1850. In 1854 a newfactory was built on the banks of theCharles River , inWaltham, Massachusetts , The company eventually became theWaltham Watch Company , the first company to manufacture interchangeable movement parts, as well as assemble and sell at affordable prices and create reliable watches. Some of these includeRailroad chronometers ,8-Day Clocks and othertimer s in the U.S.A.Dennison moved to
Europe in the final years of his life. After adventures inSwitzerland he moved toEngland where he founded a very successful watch case company. He died in 1895, inBirmingham .ources
*Reprint of "
The American Jeweler ", February 1888, by Greg R. Frauenhoff, January 2003
*"Seventy-Five Years" Company edited booklet, Dennison Manufacturing Co,Framingham, Massachusetts , U.S.A.
*"Watch Case Makers of England; NAWCC Supplement 20", Philip T. Priestly,NAWCC , Spring 1994External links
* [http://www.nawcc.org/ NAWCC: National Association of Watch & Clocks Collectors] ,
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