Timeline Watch
1958

Heuer Monte Carlo dashboard

First transatlantic jet passenger service started by BOAC, with a New York to London route

1958 Heuer Monte Carlo dashboard Chronograph.

Introduced in 1958 to replace the Autavia, the Monte Carlo features a 12-hour numerical counter in a window at the bottom of the dial, Heuer claims the Monte Carlo had the greatest legibility ever found in a stopwatch.

The rare three-button models sold through 1967 used a button to advance or reset the hour disc; two-button models used a single button to reset hours, minutes, and seconds. Paired with a Master Time on a double back-plate, the Monte Carlo was one-half of the classic Rally-Master pair.

It all started in 1860, with Edouard Heuer setting up a workshop in Bernese, a predominantly French-speaking area of Switzerland close to the French border, a small town even now with a population under 5000. However, it is no stranger to watch companies, having also been where Breitling was founded and having been home to Longines. Of course, those companies were artisan workshops producing small numbers of mostly silver-cased pocket watches.

In 1914 Heuer made the first wristwatch for men, they used pocket-watch movements and reflected demand for wristwatches that would only increase during the First World War and after.

1920 was the first time in 8 years that an Olympic Games had been held, following the cancellation of the 1916 Berlin events. Heuer had some prominence as a sports timing company by this point and was pleased to be selected as the official timer of the Antwerp games. This was subsequently extended to the 1924 games in Paris and 1928 in Amsterdam: this cemented the brand marriage between timing and sports.

For today’s collectors, the heyday for Heuer really began in the mid-1930s. I think that’s also probably true for many other brands. Heuer began making pilots chronographs in 35. These were used by Air Force pilots primarily, a lot of them in the German Air Force. For most Heuer collectors, these pilot chronographs from around 1935 are the first real survivors that regularly can be found in the market today.

In the 1960s and 1970s, no brand was more prominent in motorsports timing than Heuer.

On 3rd of March 1969, and after 4 years of development, Jack Heuer invited the international press to Geneva and NY to present the new Caliber 11 Chronograph movement. This historic moment marked a new era when, for the first time, watches were automatically wound.