The Historiques American 1921 revives the tilted-dial pocket-watch-on-wrist concept; secondary prices are firm because the design is genuinely unique and Vacheron's production is carefully controlled.
The Historiques American 1921 is a faithful re-edition of a Vacheron Constantin curiosity from the early wristwatch era, when makers were simply strapping pocket-watch movements to the wrist and tilting the dial so the crown fell at the correct angle. It is one of the few shaped-case references in the VC catalog that collectors actually want, rather than tolerate, and the cushion case in rose gold has a warmth that photographs badly and wears beautifully.
The original American 1921 was produced for the U.S. market in the 1920s, when American retailers preferred the crown at the twelve-o-clock position for ease of winding; tilting the dial 45 degrees was the solution, and it became the watch's defining feature. Vacheron reissued the reference in 2008 under the Historiques umbrella, powering it with the in-house caliber 4400 AS, a manual-wind movement built on an ébauche platform that Vacheron shares with a handful of related movements. The 36.5mm cushion case is sized generously for a dress watch but not uncomfortably large, and it has been offered in rose gold, yellow gold, and white gold across the production run, with the rose gold version being the most recognized.
Dial variations include ivory-toned with railroad-minute track, and later editions introduced a second time-zone complication under a different reference. The 1100S/000R-B430 designates the rose gold case with a specific dial and bracelet configuration; B430 indicates the alligator strap with a folding buckle.
Verify the dial is undamaged at the edges, because the 45-degree tilt means the dial orientation is unconventional and replacement dials are not easily sourced; any hairline cracking near the chapter ring should be a negotiation point or a walkaway. The case lugs on the cushion case are a delicate shape and show wear faster than round-case equivalents, so inspect under magnification for reshaping or overzealous polishing that has rounded the original edges. Confirm the movement serial number matches the papers; the 4400 AS is shared across several VC references and a switched movement, while rare, is not impossible in the grey market.
Crown and stem wear is worth checking, given that manual-winding is the only power source, and heavy use will show on the crown threads before anywhere else.
Grey market pricing for the rose gold 1100S/000R-B430 runs roughly $18,000 to $26,000 depending on condition, papers, and whether the original alligator strap is present; retail is higher but boutique availability has been inconsistent. White gold examples trade at a modest discount to rose gold because collector preference clearly favors the warmer metal in this case shape. The dual-time variant commands a premium of roughly 20 to 30 percent over the simple time-only when both are in comparable condition.
Full-set examples with outer box, inner box, papers, and strap tools sell at the top of the range; a naked watch without provenance documentation should be priced to reflect the risk.
Community + OSINT signals haven’t landed for this reference yet. We don’t publish a rating against zero signal — the number would mean nothing. Editorial body + caliber + market value still surface above; ratings appear once the signal corpus does.
The 45-degree rotated dial is the most copied element; verify the VC signature and chapter ring are correctly rotated, not just the case.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| dial | Dial 45-degree rotation | Entire dial rotated so 12 o'clock is at upper-right; VC signature, chapter ring numerals, and all indices correctly oriented to the rotated axis | Standard-orientation dial in a rotated case; VC signature or numerals not correctly oriented to the 45-degree axis |
| case | Asymmetric cushion case finishing | Correct asymmetric cushion proportions; case finishing quality consistent with VC standards; crown at correct rotated position | Symmetric case sold as 1921; case finishing inconsistent with VC standards under magnification |
| movement | Cal. 4400 AS through caseback | Geneva Seal visible; manual-wind architecture; no rotor; Cotes de Geneve on bridges |
Editorial estimate. Actual prices vary by condition, date, and box/papers status. Live pricing data is in development.
The caliber 4400 AS is a well-supported movement serviced at any authorized Vacheron service center; factory service intervals are recommended at 5 to 7 years for a daily-worn manual-wind. Expect factory service in the range of $800 to $1,400 depending on parts condition; independent watchmakers familiar with VC movements can service it for less, typically $400 to $700, though that forfeits the factory service record which matters for resale. Power reserve is approximately 65 hours, so if the watch is running short, the mainspring or click spring is the first thing a watchmaker should check.
| Automatic movement with rotor; absent Geneva finishing |