
Jaeger LeCoultre
Jaeger-LeCoultre 'European Market' Memovox
$4,650
In stock · analogshift.com · Watch
**This watch is currently in service. It will ship promptly upon completion to ensure accurate timekeeping and functionality. Please contact our sales team for more details.
The first truly popular mechanical alarm wristwatch was the Vulcain Cricket — a post-war hit launched in 1947 that quickly became famous enough to land on the wrists of U.S. Presidents. Naturally, Jaeger-LeCoultre wasn’t going to sit that one out.
By the late 1940s, the Grande Maison began developing its own answer: the Memovox. And rather than simply copying the Cricket formula, JLC engineered an alarm system with its own distinct personality. The Memovox uses a hammer that strikes against a post welded to the caseback, creating a direct, purposeful ring. (The Cricket, by contrast, relies on a resonant double-caseback construction.) It’s a small technical detail — and exactly the kind of detail that makes the Memovox one of the most iconic models of post-war Swiss watchmaking.
This example dates to 1953, right in the early golden era of Memovox production. Housed in a crisp stainless steel case measuring 34mm wide (excluding the crown) and approximately 42mm lug-to-lug, it wears with ideal midcentury proportions: compact, elegant, and surprisingly modern. A domed plexiglass crystal completes the period-correct charm.
The sivered dial is original, and beautifully balanced around the Memovox’s signature inner alarm disc — a design that feels both refined and deeply functional. Inside beats the hand-wound Jaeger-LeCoultre Calibre 489, a robust manual-wind movement built around the alarm complication that made the model famous.
Early Memovox watches were initially concentrated in Europe, but American-market models — in steel, two-tone, and 14K gold — were offered as early as 1951. These are signed “LeCoultre” on the dial rather than Jaeger-LeCoultre, and some even feature the coveted inner-case stamp: “Cased and Timed in the United States.”
This is the original reminder system — built before the world outsourced memory to screens.
This spectacular piece comes from the collection of Zaf Basha, a noted authority on Jaeger-LeCoultre who has published two books: Vintage Military Watches: A Guide for the Collector and Jaeger-LeCoultre: The Ultimate Guide for the Collector. Over the years, Basha put together one of the most impressive assemblages of vintage JLC timepieces in the world, and we're thrilled and honor to offer many of them for sale on Analog:Shift.
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