My father was an RAF navigator on a Venom jet, when he was killed in an air crash in 1956.
His IWC watch was one of the few things I had, of his possessions. How it survived the intense fire, god alone knows, but it did. They were tough watches. It worked fine, when my mother passed it to me when I was 13.
It may horrify some enthusiasts, but I was so impressed with a watch that kept time to a second or two a month, despite my bashing it against a brick wall, to impress my friends with its indestructibility. Well, I was a kid...
It got stolen. I want to trace it.
Are there any records of the serial numbers issued to individuals?
I had it restored by Charles Fox of Bournemouth, around 1988, and they changed a few bits. The glass was domed, and they replaced that with a flat, bevel-edged glass. The complicated metal strap was replaced. I was a bit disappointed about not seeing that strap again. It was what my father was wearing when he died. They said that it was more authentic, but what is more "authentic" than the watch as worn, at the time?
Then I gave it to a watch repairer in Southampton, in the early 1990s. I have never seen it again.
My fault of course. The man was dishonest. Recommended by a good friend, he had serviced many clocks for her. We were a bit desperate for cash as our business had gone bust, and sold him an 18c longcase clock. During his visit to our home, I asked him if he could see what was wrong with the IWC, as it had stopped. He took it away without a receipt being issued. I actually had no idea that it was valuable! Just a precious thing to me.
A phone call established that it "needed a new crown wheel", and he gave me a price. Unemployed, I said that I couldn't afford it just then, and could he hang on to it for a month or two? Months passed, I could not afford it, etc.
Then I went to collect the watch. He said he must have put it in storage, it might be in his loft at home, all sorts of nonsense.
In 1999, he was convicted of deception. One of the famous "Titanic" pocket watches came into his shop and he knew what it was, offered £15 for it as scrap. Went to prison.
I then realised - so stupid me, so trusting - that he had sold my dad's watch. I looked up the value of them. He was tempted again.
So, anyway, I want that watch back. The present owner will not know this story. They will have bought it fairly at auction perhaps.
How can I get the serial number? There was an arrow and a number on the back.
If there is any way of finding out the number, issued to my father, then I might be able to track down the actual watch.
I adored that IWC. My best remembrance of my father.