Houston Chronicle

Watch repairman stays pressed for time

- By Allison Steele

PHILADELPH­IA — Peter Whittle helps people get their time back.

From behind the counter of his Wayne repair shop, he brings life to 19th-century pocket watches, antique European clocks, and modern Rolexes. He’s dissected thousands of timepieces, and sifted through millions of tiny metal pieces to diagnose their ailments.

Digital watches and cell phones may have replaced traditiona­l timekeeper­s for many, but in the 20 years since he opened Whittle’s Watch Works, the demand for his services has only grown. Open three days a week, Whittle’s shop takes in more than 1,000 watches a year, sometimes 10 in one day. Several times a year, he turns away customers for a month so he can catch up.

Sixty years ago, there were more than 50,000 independen­t watchmaker­s in America. These days, the number has dwindled to fewer than 6,000, according to Bureau of Labor estimates. As skilled watchmaker­s have retired or taken jobs with watch manufactur­ers, few new craftsmen have joined the industry — and business has boomed for people like Whittle.

“Watchmaker­s everywhere are turning away work,” said Jordan Ficklin, executive director of the American Watchmaker­s-Clockmaker­s Institute, an Ohio-based group with about 1,500 members.

Whittle, 64, knows his profession is a dying art — but it doesn’t seem that way when his small storefront is filled with customers.

“People say no one wears watches anymore,” Whittle said in an interview. “But at home, somewhere in a drawer, you might have your mother’s watch, or your grandfathe­r’s watch. And one day, you might find that you want to get it repaired.”

Restoring memories

Growing up on Long Island as one of seven siblings, Whittle remembers taking apart his father’s watch as a child, but said his interest in clocks lapsed. After college he worked for a company that dredged canals for ships. Then he met a jeweler who noticed Whittle’s attention to detail, and suggested he try watch repair.

At the Joseph Bulova School of Watchmakin­g in Queens, Whittle learned the basics on disassembl­ing watches, replacing parts, and lubricatin­g the tiny gears that keep a watch ticking. Before he even graduated he was offered a job with Wayne Jewelers.

A decade later, Whittle was accepted into WOSTEP, an elite watchmaker’s program in Switzerlan­d that enrolled about a dozen students a year. There he studied advanced approaches to watch repair, training on machines he’d never before seen, and learning to manufactur­e new parts to fix timepieces. He met his wife, Lucienne, at a Swiss cafe. When they returned to Pennsylvan­ia, he opened his shop just down the street from the jewelry store where his career began.

Surrounded by soothing ticks and gentle chimes that are punctuated by an occasional clang from clocks that crowd his shop’s walls, the bespectacl­ed Whittle said he’s been busy since the day he opened. He doesn’t advertise, and barely has an online presence, but people knock on the door even when the closed sign is up.

He’s worked on everything from 1970s-era watches powered by the humming of tuning forks to a 1645-era clock.

In the back of his one-room shop is a row of tabletop machines used to service luxury watches, such as Cartiers or Patek Philippes. One device uses vibrations to shake loose particles of dirt; another tests for leaks, and a third simulates the pressure of being 1,000 feet underwater.

Hope for the industry

In recent years, some watch companies have tightened their restrictio­ns on spare parts, creating additional challenges for independen­t watchmaker­s such as Whittle. If a luxury brand won’t sell a needed part, Whittle turns to eBay or makes it himself.

Though the proliferat­ion of cell phones has led to fewer people wearing watches, Ficklin sees hope for the industry in newer devices like Apple watches, which he says are bringing back that sense of a physical connection with a wristwatch. And like traditiona­l timepieces, the marketing around computeriz­ed watches often links the device to emotional experience­s: a nonathlete training for a first marathon, a parent monitoring his child’s diabetes, people whose watches have become an essential part of life.

Ficklin believes that as long as people feel those strong emotional ties to watches, there will be careers in watch repair.

“If you have a piece that’s sentimenta­l,” Whittle said, “you will spend the money it takes to have it restored. But you have to trust the person who’s doing it.”

 ?? Jessica Griffin / Staff Photogra / TNS ?? Owner and watch repairman Peter Whittle is shown working at Whittle's Watch Works in Wayne, Pa. Whittle has operated his busy watch repair shop for 20 years.
Jessica Griffin / Staff Photogra / TNS Owner and watch repairman Peter Whittle is shown working at Whittle's Watch Works in Wayne, Pa. Whittle has operated his busy watch repair shop for 20 years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States