1941 Bulova "Director" Anaconda Snakeskin Band 

About Bulova

Joseph Bulova started a small jewelry shop in New York City around 1875.  In 1912, he launched his first plant dedicated entirely to the production of watches.  At his factory in Biel, Switzerland, he began a mass production new to watchmaking. Think of Joseph Bulova as the “Henry Ford” of watches.  


Through standardized parts and visually distinctive advertising, Bulova made the wristwatch both popular and widely available to the American public.  From 1922 through 1930, Bulova marketed 350 different ladies’ Art Deco watches, with at least an equal number of models for men.  Distinguishing between different years and models is best left to—well, people who have the time and passion for that kind of thing.


Bulova produced the first radio advertising broadcast in 1926, announcing the first beep in history: At the tone, it’s eight o’clock, Bulova Watch Time, an announcement heard by millions of Americans. The annoucements were handly because, let's face it: meachanical watches were not all that accurate and could be off by a couple minutes each date. By 1940, Bulova sponsored each of the top 20 radio shows in the US.  Part showman and part innovator, Bulova built an observatory atop a NYC skyscraper to determine precise time, and the Accuton movement which used a tuningfork to regulate watch function.  Perhaps, again, imating the automakers, Bulova experimented with different “lines” for different price points: Westfield in the 1930s and Caravelle in the 1960s were the more “modest” Bulova lines.


The Citizen Watch Company (Japan) bought Bulova in 2008. Both companies are now part of the Swatch Group.


About this watch

Offered is a 1941 "Director."  It has 
  • a curved back, 
  • two tone gold and silver dial, 
  • BLUE 40s sword hands.
  • 14k rolled gold plate benzel; stainless back
  • 8AH, 17J movement
The Band:
  • The watch came with a small Anaconda snake skin band. I think it sould stay with the watch.
  • This makes it a women's watch... a small woman.
  • 3.75" length tounge; 2.5" buckle end... sorry, guys.
  • The band has very little wear and holes and buckle look good.
And all in a Bulova Box!  I aquired this watch from a pawn shop.  Because of the small size I was not able to personally do my "walking around" test.  But I have run it for several days and it sets, winds, and runs great!

About me

I buy and sell a few old watches from the mid-1930s through the mid-1960s.  I like Hamilton and the occasional Bulova.  Sometimes I will venture into British watches (e.g., Ingersoll).  I deal in mechanical and automatics.  Like a tracker pipe organ (also an interest of mine) they are a combination of history, architecture, and machine: little art works.  I confess to owning a Citizen for work use, but I generally eschew battery powered appliances.


If the items in my collection seem similar, it is because I like aparticular style and function.  I prefer real numbers on a watch face and need to tell time at a glance while speaking.  I typically wear these watches for weeks,months, or years before selling them—ahh— to make sure everything works as it should.  I am not just an eBay flipper.  If I tell you a watch runs and keeps time: it runs and keeps time.  When I make a buying mistake (oh, it happens) the watch goes to off to a professional watchmaker to be rebuilt and restored and, after my recoveringsome cost by wearing it, offered as such at a premium.


All the watches I sell are intended to be ready to wear andgiftable.