A FRENCH 49-HOUR MARINE CHRONOMETER

Details
A FRENCH 49-HOUR MARINE CHRONOMETER
O. Dumas, No. 670, circa 1863

The frosted silver dial signed and numbered O. DUMAS á St. Nicolas Près Dieppe No. 670, COMPAGNIE GÉNÉRALE TRANSATLANTIQUE, Roman hour numerals, sector up-and-down dial, yellow metal hands, subsidiary seconds dial with blued steel hand, reversed fusee, Earnshaw escapement, cut bimetallic balance, circular heat compensation weights each with brass adjusting screw to top flat, blued steel helical balance spring, spring foot detent with jewelled locking stone, brass bowl and gimbal in continental style plain three-tier mahogany box, the centre section with bone roundel inscribed DUMAS 670, external brass drop handles
97 mm. dial diam., 170 mm. sq. box
Literature
Jean Claude Sabrier, La Longitude en mer à l'heure de Louis Berthoud, et Henri Motel, 1993, p. 675

Lot Essay

Onésime Dumas, 1824-1889, had an illustrious horological background. The Nephew of Henri Motel he was apprenticed first to Louis Frédérique Perrelet, (1781-1854), then to Charles Auguste Berthoud, (1798-1826). Having gone back to work with his uncle for a few years he succeeded Victor Gannery who had himself been apprenticed to Perrelet and soon afterwards set up at Saint Nicholas d'Aliermont near Dieppe. By this time Saint Nicholas had undergone an horological revolution under Honoré Pons - (see lot 31) - so that when Gannery died prematurely at the age of 32 Dumas came into possession of a thriving business in 1851. He exhibited precision horology at Rouen in 1856 and chronometers at Paris in 1857. He was also attributed as being the first to produce chronometers in the English calibre.
The present chronometer was on trial at the Depot de la Marine Chronometer Trials, 1 December 1864 to 1 March 1865.

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