Longines today is shorthand for accessible Swiss elegance, the name that often sits on a first serious watch. In the 1950s, though, sold through Longines-Wittnauer in New York, the brand was a quieter and more serious thing than that reputation now suggests, and this gold-filled Reference 2148-1, with the Longines 9LT caliber keeping small seconds at six, is in our opinion exactly the kind of watch that proves the point.
The history is stamped right into the inner caseback. It reads LONGINES-WITTNAUER WATCH CO. INC., NEW YORK, GENEVA, MONTREAL, above 10K GOLD FILLED and the 2148-1 reference. Albert Wittnauer became the exclusive United States agent for Longines in 1880, and in 1936 the firm was formally rebranded Longines-Wittnauer, a distribution partnership that ran an unbroken 114 years until 1994. Watches like this one carry a Swiss Longines movement in an American gold-filled case, the standard arrangement of the era for managing import duty on a finished watch, which is why the 2148-1 is a Longines-Wittnauer case reference rather than a Swiss one.
Behind the dial sits the Longines 9LT, a 17-jewel manual-wind caliber that grew out of the 1940s 9L. Our movement photographs show it doing the thing that separates a properly made tank watch from a merely rectangular one: it is a shaped caliber that fills the rectangular case rather than a round movement marooned in the middle of it. The train-side bridge is signed LONGINES WATCH CO SWISS, with SEVENTEEN and 17 JEWELS spelled out for the American market, ADJUSTED running up the balance bridge, and the serial 9445728 placing this example in the mid-1950s. The finishing is honest mid-century work, gilt bridges and ruby jewels in polished settings, the kind of movement Longines was still building with real care while much of the trade had started cutting corners.
The case is where the title earns the word hourglass. The 10k yellow gold filled tank pinches at the waist and flares back out into sculpted, grooved lugs at top and bottom, a silhouette closer to a small piece of 1950s industrial design than to a plain rectangle. A tall boxed acrylic crystal rises over the dial and throws the light around at its edges, and the signed fluted crown sits at three. The outer caseback is stamped simply 10K GOLD FILLED. There is honest wear here and we would not hide it: fine hairlines across the back, a little softening at the high points, and the faint warm blush at the lug corners where decades on the wrist have brought the base metal up under the gold. It reads as a watch that was worn and kept, not one that sat in a drawer.
The dial is the reason to keep looking. A smooth silver panel runs vertically down the center carrying the LONGINES signature, and just beneath it sits the winged hourglass, an emblem worth a sentence of its own: registered in 1889 and never once altered, it is the oldest continuously used registered trademark in all of watchmaking. Flanking that center panel are two fields of fine clous-de-Paris hobnail texture that catch the light differently from every angle. Applied gold Arabic numerals mark twelve, three, six and nine, with faceted gold dart markers at the hours between, and a small rectangular sub-seconds register with a crosshair sits at six, a detail that ties the dial back to the geometry of the case. The faceted dauphine hands are gold to match and lightly freckled with age, and there is no lume anywhere on this dress dial, exactly right for the period. The whole surface has aged evenly and honestly, with none of the flatness that gives away a refinish.
We have fitted it on a mud grey leather strap with cream contrast stitching and an OTTUHR signed buckle. The soft grey keeps the warm yellow of the gold-filled case as the center of attention, picks up the cool silver of the dial, and lets a compact 1950s tank wear with the understatement it was designed around.
Serviced in-house at OTTUHR and backed by our 2-year mechanical warranty, this is a quietly confident piece: compact, characterful, and mechanically sound. For the collector who would rather wear the real form-cased Longines that an American gentleman actually bought in the Eisenhower years than chase the obvious round-case shortlist, the 2148-1 is an easy watch to live with. Some watches announce themselves. This one simply keeps good time and good company.
