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HISTORY
In
1891 a young, talented master watchmaker, Henri Frederic Sandoz,
founded the Tavannes Watch Company in a small Swiss village,
Tavannes, in the Jura mountains. He and his partners, who were rich
fabric merchants, soon opened markets around the world, notably in
Canada, Russia, United States and the Far East. It was during this
time that watches were becoming popular. Industrialization and the
expansion of the railroad system made a standardized time necessary.
The United Kingdom, in 1884, set its time to Greenwich Mean Time,
establishing the watch business as we know it today. Henri
Frederic Sandoz was a real entrepreneur. His visits to American
manufacturers inspired him, and he was the first to create machine
tools exclusively for the Swiss watch industry. Tavannes became an
important Swiss watch company because of Sandoz’s engineering
abilities. In half a century, Tavannes built five factories in
Switzerland, and became the fourth largest watch manufacturer in the
world. At that time they employed over 3,000 skilled watchmakers and
produced over 4,000 watches a day. With over 300 patents obtained
for mechanical and automatic timepieces, Tavannes was producing
movements for most of the famous Swiss brands. Many of these
innovations are still currently being used. Today Tavannes Watch
Company is known for its quality, accuracy, and reliability in the
world of fine Swiss
timepieces.
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