This has been a great year for American watchmaking. It just feels like there’s an interest in watches made in America that I haven’t really observed in years past. There are a few reasons for this, I think, including the continued uncertainty regarding tariffs placed on imported watches from Switzerland and elsewhere, as well as a handful of brands that are doing some very interesting things here in the United States, and rethinking what defines “American watchmaking” to begin with. And while I’m genuinely very excited about new brands like Cornell, 5280, Typsim, and a variety of others that bring new ideas to the American watchmaking landscape and are indeed actively producing components for their timepieces in America, it’s worth reminding ourselves that some brands have been doing interesting things on these shores for years.
Roland Murphy is a legendary figure in contemporary American watchmaking, and for those of us celebrating a renewed interest in domestic watch manufacturing, Roland and his RGM brand need to be part of the conversation. RGM was founded in 1992, and Roland and his team have been consistently pushing the envelope forward in American watch production ever since. Based in Lancaster, PA (the historic home of Hamilton before the Swatch Group acquisition and a move to Switzerland) RGM produces a variety of watches that showcase American watchmaking in different ways. The catalog consists of watches with American made movements, dials decorated in-house (in a number of ways, including skeletonization and guilloche finishes), and American manufactured cases. Through it all, there is real focus on linking RGM’s modern production to American watchmaking history. These watches serve as wearable tributes to a proud tradition.
That’s arguably most evident in the Model 222-RR collection. These watches take antique pocket watch movements, rebuilt to a better than original state in terms of timekeeping and finish, and house them in an incredibly satisfying stainless steel case with dials made to evoke historic watches built for timing America’s expanding railroad networks over 100 years ago. I had a chance to wear the latest addition to the 222-RR collection with a “Ferguson Style” dial recently, and it’s a truly unique experience thanks to the nature of the pocket watch movement, and the offset dial and crown. If you ever want to feel truly connected to American watchmaking history, the best way is probably by owning an American made pocket watch. But the second best way might be to wear a watch like the 222-RR that makes creative use of an old movement.
The movement is the heart of the experience of the 222-RR so we’ll start there. It’s a Hamilton 10-sized pocket watch movement (a grade 921 or 923) that is rebuilt by RGM using as many like-new parts as possible. The nice thing, of course, about American pocket watches is that brands like Hamilton made them in the millions, and while certainly many have not survived the last century in a condition that would allow parts to be used in a modern watch made for daily use, watchmakers have access to to enough parts and various components to ensure that something like the 222-RR can be made to the high standards set by RGM. That said, not all movement components are sourced from vintage pieces – the mainsprings used on the 222-RR, for example, are new. The entire movement is overhauled and refinished by a single watchmaker, and the end result is a beautiful piece of work that I found myself frequently finding excuses to look at. It’s also a lot of fun to operate, and has a heavy and satisfying winding and setting feel that is entirely different from any modern watch you’re likely to have experienced.




