Hans Wilsdorf and his brother-in-law, Alfred Davis,
founded Wilsdorf and Davis, the company that would eventually become Rolex SA,
in London, England in 1905. Wilsdorf
and Davis' main business at the time was importing Hermann Aegler's Swiss movements to England and placing them in quality
watch cases made by Dennison and others. These early wristwatches were sold to jewellers, who then put their own
names on the dial. The earliest watches from Wilsdorf and Davis were usually
hallmarked "W&D" inside the caseback.
In 1908, Wilsdorf registered the
trademark "Rolex" and opened an office in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. The company name "Rolex" was
registered on 15 November 1915. The book The
Best of Time: Rolex Wristwatches: An Unauthorized History by Jeffrey P. Hess and James Dowling
says that the name was just made up. One
story, never confirmed by Wilsdorf, is that the name came from the French
phrase horlogerie exquise,
meaning "exquisite clockwork" or
as a contraction of "horological excellence". Wilsdorf was said to
want his watch brand's name to be easily pronounceable in any language. He also thought that the name
"Rolex" was onomatopoeic,
sounding like a watch being wound. It is easily pronounceable in many languages
and, as all letters have the same size, allows to be written symmetrically. It
was also short enough to fit on the face of a watch.
In 1914, Kew Observatory awarded a Rolex watch a Class A precision certificate,
a distinction which was normally awarded exclusively to marine chronometers.
In 1919, Wilsdorf left England
due to wartime taxes levied on luxury imports as well as export duties on the
silver and gold used for the watch cases driving costs too high and moved the company to Geneva, Switzerland, where it was
established as the Rolex Watch
Company. Its name was later changed to Montres
Rolex, SA and finally Rolex, SA. Upon the death of his wife in 1944,
Wilsdorf established the Hans Wilsdorf Foundation in which he left all of his
Rolex shares, making sure that some of the company's income would go to
charity. The company is still owned by a private trust and shares are not
traded on any stock exchange.
In December 2008, the abrupt
departure of Chief Executive Patrick Heiniger, for “personal reasons”, was
followed by a denial by the company that it had lost 1 billion Swiss francs (approx £574 million,
$900 million) invested with Bernard
Madoff, the American asset manager who pleaded guilty to an approximately
£30 billion worldwide Ponzi
scheme fraud.
Today, Rolex watches are
popularly considered status
symbols.
text : Wikipedia.
0 comments:
Post a Comment