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Vintage Rolex Wellington Observatory WW2 Men’s Military Watch - Image 1
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Vintage Rolex Wellington Observatory WW2 Men’s Military Watch

DIRECT PRICE SAVE 10%
EBAY PRICE$2999.00
DIRECT -10%$2699.10

DESCRIPTION

Up for sale is a rare vintage Rolex Wellington Observatory men’s military wristwatch from the World War II era. This is a strong example of Rolex’s wartime production, featuring a classic military-style dial with Arabic numerals, an outer minute track, and a red 24-hour inner track that gives the watch a distinctive and purposeful appearance. The watch is in full working condition and is running and holding accurate time. All parts of the watch are original aside from the strap. It is fitted on a high-end aftermarket black leather strap that complements the watch well. The watch retains its original 17 jewel Rolex signed movement along with its original Rolex Keystone case and crown, all consistent with examples produced during this period. The case measures approximately 30 mm excluding the crown, giving it a solid wrist presence while maintaining classic vintage proportions. The watch is in great physical condition for its age and shows signs of use and age consistent with a vintage timepiece. The photos best describe its physical condition and should be reviewed carefully. Key Details: • Brand: Rolex • Model: Wellington Observatory • Era: World War II (1940s) • Case Size: Approximately 30 mm (excluding crown) • Case: Original Rolex Keystone case with original crown • Dial: Original military-style dial with Arabic numerals and red 24-hour track • Strap: High-end aftermarket black leather strap • Condition: Running and holding accurate time; shows signs of use and age • Movement: Original Rolex signed 17 jewel movement A highly collectible WWII-era Rolex Wellington Observatory with strong originality and classic military styling, representing an important period in Rolex history. Ships carefully. Feel free to message me with any questions.
BRAND:
Rolex
UNIT CONDITION:
Pre-owned - Good
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► ARCHIVE FILE: ROLEX — BRAND HISTORY

Rolex began in London in 1905, when Hans Wilsdorf and his brother-in-law Alfred Davis founded Wilsdorf & Davis to case Swiss movements for the British market. Wilsdorf registered the Rolex name in 1908, choosing it because it was short, easy to pronounce in any language, and fit neatly on a dial. He then set about proving that wristwatches, still dismissed as jewelry, could be precision instruments: a Rolex earned the first chronometer certificate granted to a wristwatch in 1910, a Kew Class A certificate followed in 1914, and the firm moved to Geneva in 1919.

Two inventions made the modern sports watch possible. The Oyster case of 1926 sealed the movement behind a screw-down bezel, case back, and crown; Wilsdorf proved it in 1927 by having swimmer Mercedes Gleitze wear one for more than ten hours in the English Channel, then announced the result in a front-page newspaper advertisement. In 1931 came the Perpetual rotor, a self-winding weight swinging through a full 360 degrees that kept the watch wound and the crown safely screwed down. Those two ideas remain the backbone of the catalog a century later.

The postwar decades produced the references that define the tool watch: the Datejust in 1945, the Explorer and the Submariner in 1953, the GMT-Master in 1955 for Pan Am crews, the Day-Date in 1956, and the Cosmograph Daytona in 1963. None of these were luxury objects at launch; they were equipment for divers, pilots, and engineers, which is precisely why the early examples matter. Rolex changed details constantly, so dial printing, bezel inserts, and crown guards let specialists date a watch almost to the year.

Vintage Rolex is the most scrutinized corner of the watch market, and originality is everything: an untouched dial outweighs a polished case, and correct period parts outweigh cosmetic perfection. Gilt-dial sports models and early GMTs sit at the top, but honest Oyster Perpetuals, Air-Kings, and Datejusts from the 1950s through the 1970s remain attainable ways into the brand. Serial numbers date production, service history adds real value, and the deep base of parts and knowledge around these watches means a good example can be maintained indefinitely.

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