Silver pocket watch case

A back cover from a pocket watch from the 1845 Northwest Passage Expedition led by Sir John Franklin. It has an engine turned case back with central reserve and milled decoration to the band. The inside cover has hallmarks.

The watch was found by Lieutenant William R. Hobson’s sledge team on 24 May 1859 at a place where a ship’s boat was discovered on the coast of Erebus Bay, King William Island, as part of the search expedition led by Captain F. L. McClintock. Hobson refers to finding ‘One of the chronometers, the three watches, … were found in the stern sheets.’ [Stenton, ‘Arctic’ v.69, No. 4, p.517]. McClintock visited the site on 30 May and records ‘Five watches’ [McClintock, ‘Voyage of the Fox’ (1859), page 291].

The newspapers that covered the Royal United Services Museum display of Franklin relics described it as ‘…a small silver watch, maker’s name, “A. Myres, London”…’ [e.g. Belfast Newsletter, 19 October 1859].

The Myres watch was displayed at the Royal Naval Museum, Greenwich, ‘Case 17. Nos. 8, 9 and 10. Silver watches’. The item, based on the shape, rust patterns, and label, is shown in ‘Stereoscopic slides of the relics of Sir John Franklin’s Expedition’ photographed by Lieutenant Cheyne RN, at the United Services Museum, Whitehall, No.8. The label below it states ‘SILVER WATCH / maker’s name / A MYRES LONDON’. (Top right to the left of the two spoons and two forks). The two other watches were described in the draft 1913 RNM,G, catalogue as a silver hunting watch and a silver watch with a leopard’s crest – confirmed by McClintock’s handwritten list in his notebook [NMM, MCL/21].

Object Details

ID: JEW0030.1
Type: Case
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Holliday, Cornelius Brook
Date made: 1838-1839
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Overall: 6 mm x 50 mm x 51 mm
Parts: Pocket watch in a silver case (Watch)
  • Silver pocket watch case (Case) (JEW0030.1)