Overview
Identification is locked by clear factory marks. The movement is signed 'A. W. W. Co. Waltham, Mass. Riverside', marked '19 Jewels' and 'Adjusted'. The movement serial number 18133636 definitively dates production to circa 1910-1911.
Identification
Photo reference
5 uploaded photos
Overview
Identification is locked by clear factory marks. The movement is signed 'A. W. W. Co. Waltham, Mass. Riverside', marked '19 Jewels' and 'Adjusted'. The movement serial number 18133636 definitively dates production to circa 1910-1911.
Story
George Richards Minot (1885–1950) was a renowned Harvard physician who shared the 1934 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for pioneering liver therapy to treat pernicious anemia. He received his MD from Harvard Medical School in 1912. The watch's timeline aligns perfectly with his early career, featuring a 1911-dated Alpha Omega Alpha medical honor society fob and a 1913 presentation engraving on the cuvette. The market for antique American pocket watches is heavily bifurcated.
Maker / Origin
Waltham (American Waltham Watch Co.)
Condition & Value
The watch is in aesthetically well-preserved condition with a clean dial and intact case, though the seller notes it is currently not running. The movement will require professional horological service to restore function. The material of the attached fob is currently unverified and may be gold-filled rather than solid gold.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
The market for antique American pocket watches is heavily bifurcated. Standard models trade near their intrinsic gold scrap value, while high-jewel, adjusted movements (like the Riverside) command horological premiums. Exceptional provenance—particularly to Nobel laureates or significant historical figures—transcends the traditional watch market, attracting specialized medical history and institutional collectors who drive prices significantly above the baseline.
▲ Documented provenance to 1934 Nobel Laureate George R. Minot
▲ High-grade 19-jewel Waltham Riverside movement
▲ Solid 14K gold case confirmed by B. W. C. Co. hallmarks
▲ Presence of the original Harvard Alpha Omega Alpha medical honor society fob
▼ Non-running movement requires professional service and may need replacement parts
▼ Unverified fob material — if gold-filled rather than solid gold, the intrinsic value floor drops
▼ Unverified total weight — exact scrap gold floor cannot be calculated without gram weight
Best Venue
Do not attempt to wind or force the movement. Given the historical significance, consign this to a premier auction house with a dedicated science and medical history department (such as Bonhams or Sotheby's), rather than a general estate or watch-only auction.
Upside Potential
If the attached AOA fob is confirmed to be solid 14K gold and the watch requires only a basic cleaning rather than major mechanical repair, the combined intrinsic value and historical premium could push the final result past $4,500 at a specialized medical history auction.
Also found — market-range context
Surfaced during research but not used to anchor the valuation — wrong form, species, era, or no published price. Shown so the market range around this item is visible.