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George Daniels (watchmaker)

Horologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George Daniels (watchmaker)
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George Daniels, CBE, FBHI, FSA, AHCI (19 August 1926 – 21 October 2011) was an English horologist, inventor of the coaxial escapement, author and a classic car collector.[1]

Quick facts Born, Died ...

He hand built 23 pocket watches and two wrist watches, as well as clocks.[2]:pages 221-222 As at December 2022, only Patek Phillipe and Rolex watches have achieved higher prices. Six of his watches have each sold for in excess of USD$1.5 million.[citation needed]

Producing a single watch and its components required 2,500 hours from Daniels, over about a year.[3] Commentators have referred to them as 'works of art' and 'technological and horological master pieces'.[4][3] Typically his watches had clear, clean dials with subsidiary dials interwoven with the main chapter ring.[5]

He was selective about the commissions he accepted, stating "I never made watches for people if I didn't care for them."[6]

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Early life and career

Daniels was born in Sunderland in 1926. His mother was unmarried so she had fled London and travelled north. After Daniels was born, he and his mother returned to London, where she married Daniels' father.[4] In 1944, Daniels joined the army; he already had an interest in watches and repaired some for other soldiers. On leaving the army in 1947, he bought tools with his £50 gratuity; worked repairing watches, and took horology night classes.[citation needed]

In 1960, he opened his first watch repair and cleaning shop in London. He was interested in the work of Abraham-Louis Breguet and Daniels became an expert on those watches.[2]

In 1969, Daniels constructed his first pocket watch, for Sam Clutton, and it created interest amongst collectors. Having originally sold it for £2,000, five years later he repurchased it for £8,000. In 2012, it sold at auction for $285,000.[7]

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Co-axial escapement

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The co-axial escapement

Daniels accepted a commission from Seth G. Atwood to create a timepiece that would improve the performance of mechanical watches.[8] By 1974, he had designed a new watch escapement and in 1976 incorporated it in his watch 10 as the Daniels independent double wheeled escapement. The 1980 patented development of that was the co-axial escapement[9] used in his watch 17.[10]

Daniels' mechanism has been described by some as the most important development in horology in the past 250 years[10] but met little interest until Nicolas Hayek introduced an Omega automatic watch using it in 1999.[11] It took years of presenting the invention to various brands, including Patek Philippe. Daniels' friend and peer Derek Pratt played an important role in the process.[12][13]

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Later life

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The Grand Complication watch of 1987

Daniels continued to make watches well into later life.[14] Others were made independently, in his name, but with movements designed by Roger Smith.[15][16]

Awards and Acknowledgements

Daniels was a liveryman and master of the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers and received its Gold Medal.[17] He was awarded a Gold Medal from the City of London Corporation and the Kullberg Medal from the Stockholm Watchmakers' Guild.[10]

In 2006, Sotheby's held a retrospective exhibition of his work, including every watch Daniels had made, except one held by the British Museum.

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Personal life and educational trust

He married, in 1964, Juliet Marryat, with whom he had a daughter, Sarah Jane Daniels. The marriage was later dissolved. He was the uncle of philosopher Stephen Neale. Daniels died on 21 October 2011.[10]

In 2012, part of Daniels' collection, including some pieces he made, was sold by Sotheby's in a 134-lot sale. The auction raised over £8 million for the George Daniels Educational Trust, which helps students seeking higher education in the fields of horology, engineering, medicine or construction.[21]

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Cars

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Daniels' Bentley Blower No.1

Daniels' classic car collection included:[22][23]

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Publications

Daniels' publications include:-

  • Clutton, Cecil; Daniels, George (1965). Watches. London: B. T. Batsford. ISBN 978-0670750764.
  • Daniels, George (1966). English and American Watches.
  • Daniels, George (1974). The Art of Breguet. London: Sotheby Parke Bernet. ISBN 0-85667-004-9.
  • Clutton, Cecil; Daniels, George (1975). Clocks & Watches in the Collection of the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers. London: Sotheby Parke Bernet. ISBN 0-85667-019-7.
  • Daniels, George; Markarian, Ohannes (1980). Watches & Clocks in the David Solomons Collection. London: Sotheby Parke Bernet. ISBN 085667074X.
  • Daniels, George (1981). Watchmaking. London: Sotheby's. ISBN 0-85667-150-9.
  • Daniels, George (2010). The Practical Watch Escapement. Isle of Man: Philip Wilson. ISBN 978-0-85667-687-1.
  • Daniels, George (2000). "All in Good Time: Reflections of a Watchmaker" (3rd ed.). London: Philip Wilson (published 2013). ISBN 978-0-85667-680-2.
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References

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