It is easy to assume a vintage Longines like this one left Switzerland fully finished. The American-market pieces rarely did, and this rectangular vintage Longines Tank, reference 3007-528, is a genuinely instructive example of why. In our opinion it is one of the more honest little history lessons we can put on a wrist: a Swiss movement, an American case, and a dial that gives away none of the arrangement.
For much of the twentieth century, Longines reached buyers in the United States through the Longines-Wittnauer Watch Co., the New York firm that acted as the brand’s American agent. Duty on finished watch cases ran high, so the common practice was to ship the Swiss movements over and marry them to cases built stateside. The caseback here tells that story plainly. The inner cover is stamped LONGINES-WITTNAUER over STAR W.C. CO., the Star Watch Case Company being the Michigan maker that supplied the 10k gold filled case, with the reference 3007-528 struck just beneath.
Behind the dial sits the Longines caliber 528, a manual-wind movement of seventeen jewels that Longines built in-house rather than buying in. Ours is signed across the bridge the way collectors like to find it, LONGINES above SEVENTEEN 17 JEWELS and SWISS, marked UNADJUSTED, with the winged hourglass engraved at the lower left. It is not a chronometer, and it does not need to be. It is a well-made mid-century Longines movement doing exactly the job it was designed for, and it is running as it should.
The case measures 24mm across and 36.5mm from lug to lug, slim and elongated the way these rectangular dress watches were meant to be, on 18mm lugs. The outer back carries its own mark, a star above 10K GOLDFILLED, and it wears the soft scratches and swirls a working life leaves behind. We read that as character rather than fault, and we have left it honest rather than polishing the story out of it.
The dial is where this one earns its keep. A frosted champagne outer field gives way to a brushed sunburst oval at the center, and around that oval runs a full set of applied markers: six round brilliant diamonds in white rosette settings, alternating with six faceted star-cut markers that catch the light from the other direction. The signature reads simply LONGINES, printed the way the American-market dials were, and slim dark dauphine hands sweep across the middle. The gold dial has warmed gently with age, and the diamond accents still do the work they were set to do.
We have fitted it to a blue grained leather strap with cream contrast stitching, closed on an OTTUHR buckle. Cool blue against warm gold is a deliberate bit of contrast, understated enough to keep the watch dressy and just unexpected enough to keep it off the beaten path.
Serviced in-house at OTTUHR and backed by our two-year mechanical warranty, it comes without box or papers, which is how most of these honest working watches survive. For the collector who would rather own the whole story than half of it, the Swiss movement and the American case that carried it, this is a wonderfully complete little record of how a vintage Longines Tank actually reached America. Compact, characterful, and quietly correct, it asks only to be wound and worn.
