Advertorial

At 63, He's Finishing the Last Watches His Father Built as a Master Watchmaker at Newport News Shipbuilding for 34 Years

After Robert Harding passed away, his son Philip found crates of mechanical movements and notebooks full of craftsmanship in the family attic in Newport News, Virginia, a legacy forged alongside some of America's greatest warships. We investigated this story that's captured the hearts of the entire Hampton Roads community.

A letter from Philip Harding, self-taught watchmaker, Newport News, VA

Newport News, Virginia. Philip Harding, 63, will open his workshop for the last time at the end of this month. Inside a 200-square-foot garage converted into a workspace overlooking the harbor, he's packing up the final pieces of a legacy he never expected to carry: 287 open-heart mechanical watches, assembled by his own hands, using movements his father Robert had stored away for decades.

 

The reason it's ending? "I'm not a watchmaker," he says simply. "I did what I had to do. The watches are finished. There won't be any more."

 

Before closing this chapter for good, Philip is selling his last 287 pieces at $89 instead of $299. This isn't a marketing stunt. It's the final step in a promise made to a father who's no longer here.

 

Our investigation reveals how a son's grief turned into three years of relentless learning, and why these watches carry far more than just a mechanism inside them.

The Day Everything Changed

November 2022. Robert Harding passes away at 89. Thirty-four years spent as a master watchmaker at Newport News Shipbuilding. From 1958 to 1992, he calibrated the marine chronometers aboard warships and carriers built along the James River. The USS Enterprise. The USS Theodore Roosevelt. Dozens of vessels whose navigational precision depended on his hands.

 

"My father never talked about his work," Philip recalls. "To him, it was just what he did. He left in the morning, came home at night, and in between, he made sure thousands of sailors would reach their destination safely."

 

Three months after the funeral, Philip begins clearing out the family home. That's when he finds it, up in the attic. Behind boxes of old clothes and worn furniture: six wooden crates, carefully stacked. Inside, hundreds of mechanical movements, precision tools, and, most importantly, notebooks. Fourteen leather-bound notebooks filled with detailed annotations, diagrams, and measurements.

 

"I opened the first notebook and saw my father's handwriting," Philip remembers, his voice breaking. "Page after page on balance wheel tolerances, hairspring adjustments, how ocean humidity affects a movement… It was like hearing him talk to me one last time."

 

That night, Philip doesn't sleep. He reads the notebooks until dawn. And one thing becomes clear: he's not throwing any of it away.

Three Years to Learn What His Father Could Do in a Single Motion

Philip Harding had never held a watchmaker's screwdriver before he turned 60. A former industrial maintenance foreman, he knows his way around machinery. But watchmaking is a different world. Precision is measured in hundredths of a millimeter. Patience, in hours of silence.

 

"The first six months, I broke more parts than I assembled," he admits. "My father probably would have laughed. Then he would've shown me how, calmly, without a single unnecessary word."

 

Guided by Robert's notebooks, Philip learns. One technique a day. One mechanism a week. He sets up a workbench in the garage, facing the window that looks out over the harbor. The same harbor his father walked toward every morning.

The mechanical movement he assembles is open-heart. The balance wheel is visible through the dial. "That was my father's favorite thing about marine chronometers," Philip explains. "Seeing the heart beat. He used to say that a watch you can't see working is just an object. One where you can see the mechanism, that's a companion."

 

The case is gold-toned steel, inspired by the brass navigation instruments Robert maintained. The genuine leather strap recalls the logbooks that accompanied every voyage. The crystal glass, the luminescent hands: every detail echoes forty years of life at sea.

Why These Watches Bear the Name "Longlux"

In Robert's notebooks, one word appears over and over in the margins: "Long. Lux."

 

It took Philip weeks to figure it out. It was one of his father's old colleagues, Pete, 84, who gave him the answer. "Your father always signed his calibrations with those two letters. L.L. Longitude, Light."

 

"He said the marine chronometer brought together the only two things that keep a sailor from getting lost: precise longitude and the light to see your position."

 

Then Philip remembers. Sunday mornings, facing the harbor, watching cargo ships head out toward the open Atlantic. His father would say: "You see those ships, Philip? They cross the ocean with two things. Longitude and light. Long and Lux. Without both, they're lost."

 

A childhood memory that time had buried. When Philip engraved the name on the dial of his first completed watch, the choice was obvious. LONGLUX. His father's legacy in six letters.

A Wave of Support He Never Saw Coming

When an article in The Daily Press mentions Philip's story, the response is immediate. Messages from all over the country. Retired shipyard workers who remember Robert. Watch enthusiasts. Sons and daughters who see in this story the echo of their own relationship with a parent they've lost.

 

Some offer to fund a continuation. To create a brand. To launch a production line.

 

Philip refuses. Flat out.

 

"There was a finite number of movements in my father's crates. What I've assembled is all there will ever be. 287 watches. That's the work of his lifetime, condensed into a 200-square-foot garage. I'm not turning it into a business."

 

His decision: sell the 287 watches at $89 instead of $299. Not to undervalue his father's work. So that every watch ends up on a wrist, not in a drawer.

 

"My father built things so they could live," Philip says. "Not so they could collect dust in a display case. At this price, I know people will actually wear them. That's all that matters."

Messages That Pour In Every Day

The first buyers have received their watches. The feedback has left Philip stunned.

 

"My father was a carpenter. He had the same hands as yours. Wearing this watch is like wearing the pride of every craftsman the world forgets," writes a customer from Richmond, Virginia.

 

"I gave the Longlux to my husband for our 30th anniversary. He hasn't taken it off since," shares a buyer from Charleston, South Carolina.

 

"You can see the heart beating through the dial. My 8-year-old son is fascinated. We told him where this watch came from. He said, 'It's like the man is still alive inside it.' I cried," writes a father from Portland, Oregon.

 

On social media, the story spreads. Some call it "living heritage." Others call it "passing the torch." One word keeps coming up: "dignity."

The Last 287 Pieces of a Legacy

On the workbench Philip set up facing the harbor, the boxes are lined up. 287 watches. No warehouse inventory. No restocking possible. When Robert's crates are empty, it's over. The garage goes back to being a garage. The tools get put away. And the notebooks join the family bookshelf.

 

"I don't regret a thing," Philip says. "These three years brought me closer to my father than the sixty years he was alive. I understood his silences. I understood why he'd spend hours on a single mechanism. That was his way of saying: the things that matter take time."

 

Every watch has a genuine mechanical movement. No battery, no quartz. The open heart beats in rhythm with the wrist that wears it. The gold-toned case recalls the navigation instruments Robert calibrated every morning in the belly of those ships. The leather strap ages alongside its wearer.

 

"This isn't a luxury watch," Philip warns. "It's a watch with a soul. If you're looking for flash, keep moving. If you're looking for something with meaning, then this one's for you."

 

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LONGLUX WATCH AT $89 INSTEAD OF $299 >>

Order Before It's Too Late

The 287 Longlux watches are everything that remains of Robert Harding's legacy. No new production is planned. No restocking. When they're gone, Philip's three years of work will have reached their conclusion.

 

The price has been dropped to $89 instead of $299. A decision that has nothing to do with marketing strategy. "My father never sold a thing in his life," Philip smiles. "He'd be embarrassed by the price no matter what it was. At least at $89, I know money won't be what stops someone from wearing it."

 

Every watch comes with a guarantee: 30-day money-back, no questions asked. "If you don't love it, send it back. But I know that once you see the heart beating through the dial, you won't let it go."

Shipping is fast. Philip ships every package himself from his garage in Newport News. Early buyers report: "Carefully packed, you can feel the respect," "The watch is even more beautiful in person," "The weight, the quality of the leather, the visible movement… you can tell someone put their heart into this."

 

The count is ticking down. 287, then 260, then 230… End of the month, the workshop closes for good. For those who want to wear a piece of this story, for those looking for a gift that truly means something, this chance won't come again.

CLICK HERE TO GET YOUR LONGLUX WATCH AT $89 INSTEAD OF $299

 

Longlux Mechanical Watch

✅ Open-heart mechanical movement

 

✅ Newport News Shipbuilding heritage

 

✅ Final edition: 287 pieces

Check price and availability

Marketing disclaimer: This content is advertising and does not constitute an independent editorial article. Testimonials reflect individual experiences and are not representative of the results every user may achieve. Longlux watches are not medical devices and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Results may vary from person to person.

© 2026 All rights reserved.

 

Privacy policy · Terms and conditions of sale and use · Legal notices