Reference:2574
Oyster -> 2574
The 2574 is a pre-war manual-wind Oyster produced from roughly 1936 through 1943 in a 29.5 mm stainless steel case. This is a "boy's size" watch in the period vocabulary. Two details set it apart from the broader pre-war Oyster population: a 9¾-ligne 17-jewel Aegler movement, and the reference number engraved on the outside of the caseback. The dial is signed "Rolex Oyster Royal," "Rolex Oyster Royalite," "Rolex Oyster Observatory," or "Rolex Oyster Imperial," all drawn from Rolex's late-1930s sub-brand vocabulary, and surfaced examples carry both center-seconds (sweep) and sub-seconds dial layouts.
Core facts
| detail | value |
|---|---|
| reference | 2574 |
| family | Oyster (pre-war manual-wind) |
| production | about 1938–1943 (low confidence on endpoints) |
| case material | stainless steel (primary) |
| case diameter | 29.5 mm ("boy's size") |
| case construction | three-body Oyster, polished, screw-down crown |
| lug style | soldered lugs, era-typical |
| bezel | smooth, polished |
| caseback signature | reference engraved on the OUTER caseback (unusual for the era) |
| movement | Cal. 9¾ 17 jewels, manual-wind, sweep seconds |
| escapement | straight-line lever, Rolex Patent Superbalance, self-compensating Breguet hairspring |
| dial signature | "Rolex Oyster Royal" or "Rolex Oyster Observatory" |
| hand variants | leaf or baton, both era-typical |
| market range | about USD 1,500–4,000 for documented examples |
Where it sits in the line

The 2574 belongs to the small pre-war Oyster group that sits between the earliest 1920s and 1930s Oysters and the wartime platform watches. Its closest sibling is the 2595. Both show what Rolex treated as the smaller end of the men's catalog in the late 1930s. Period material does use the "boy's size" language, but that still meant a legitimate men's watch in its own time.
By the time 2574 production ended, the Oyster catalog had moved on. The rotor-driven Oyster Perpetual, launched in 1931 on the Bubbleback references, had absorbed most of the editorial oxygen, and the wartime platform references carried most of the volume. Manual-wind Oysters continued into the late 1940s and early 1950s (the Speedking 4220 runs from 1941 through the early 1950s), but the pre-war Royal/Observatory configuration did not survive the war intact. The 2574 is a short-production reference in a short-lived product category.
What distinguishes it
Two details set the 2574 apart. First, some examples carry the reference engraving on the outside of the caseback rather than inside, which is unusual enough to help with authentication. Second, the watch uses a smaller 9¾-ligne 17-jewel Aegler movement, and that caliber appears on the 2574 in two distinct dial layouts.
The two layouts of 2574 exist. A center-seconds dial (also called sweep seconds, centre-seconds, or seconde au centre) carries a single long seconds hand pivoting from the center of the dial, alongside the hour and minute hands. A sub-seconds dial (also called small seconds, petite seconde, or sub-dial seconds) carries a separate small register, usually at six o'clock, with its own short seconds hand running on its own pinion. The two layouts require different gear-train configurations downstream of the fourth wheel and are not interchangeable on a finished movement.
On the 2574 both configurations appear in the surfaced corpus. The 1943 Royalite Observatory shown above is a center-seconds layout; the 1936 Imperial Chronometer is a sub-seconds layout. Whether early production ran sub-seconds and later production switched to center-seconds, or whether both were offered concurrently, the surfaced sample is too thin to settle. What the dial layout does establish is a quick authentication check: a 9¾-ligne caliber paired with the wrong dial layout for that movement variant points either to a service replacement or to a misidentified reference.
Neither feature is unique to the 2574 in absolute terms. External case engravings appear on other obscure references, and the 9¾ caliber shows up elsewhere in Rolex's late-1930s small-case catalog. Their combination in a 29.5 mm boy's-size steel Oyster is what makes the 2574 specific.
The Royal / Observatory dial question
Two dial signatures are documented on the 2574, both period-correct and both Rolex-applied rather than retailer double-signatures. "Royal" is the more common of the two, part of a late-1930s Rolex dial vocabulary (alongside "Viceroy," "Imperial," and similar names) that ran across the 2280 (1939–1946), 2595 (1938–1941), 3116 (1940–1944), and others. On a 2574, "Royal" is the baseline.
'Observatory' on the 2574 reads more like marketing language than a provable certification claim. That is the important distinction. The watch shares the same hardware whether the dial says Royal or Observatory.
Case and construction

The 2574 case is a standard three-piece Oyster of its era. What makes it unusual is the size. At about 29.5mm it sits on the small end of the period men's range and wears today as a compact pre-war dress watch rather than anything like a tool model.
Lugs are soldered to the case rather than integral-cast or spring-bar-drilled. This is the default late-1930s Oyster construction and is consistent across the 2574 population in the surfaced record. The lugs on a 2574 are narrower than on a 32–34 mm men's Oyster of the same period, proportional to the smaller case. Period strap fit is 14–15 mm at the lugs.
The bezel is smooth and polished, matching the case finish. No engine-turned or decorative bezel variants are documented on the 2574. The decorated-bezel treatments Rolex used on the 3359 Viceroy and similar late-1930s references are not part of the 2574 catalog.
Case material in the surfaced record is stainless steel. Gold or gold-capped variants of the 2574 are not documented in the indexed public-market material. The reference appears to have been a steel-only production, consistent with its pricing position at the accessible end of the pre-war Oyster range and with the broader pattern that Rolex's smaller "boy's size" cases in this period were primarily a steel product. Any gold-cased watch offered as a 2574 on the modern dealer market warrants careful verification against the movement specification and the caseback engraving.
The movement
The 2574 uses a small pre-Perpetual Aegler movement with 17 jewels and Superbalance finishing, in two variants distinguished by their seconds-train configuration. The center-seconds variant carries an extended fourth-wheel pinion and an indirect-drive sweep seconds hand on the centre. The sub-seconds variant uses the standard fourth-wheel-at-six configuration and reads through a small register at six o'clock. Both run at 18,000 vph, both carry the same Superbalance with self-compensating Breguet overcoil hairspring, and both are rhodium-plated.
The period naming is messy. Rolex catalog and service material from the 1930s and 1940s does not use a single consistent term for either layout, and dealer descriptions still alternate between "centre seconds," "sweep seconds," and "centre-seconds" for the first layout and "small seconds," "sub-seconds," and "petite seconde" for the second. The synonyms refer to the same two architectures.
There is no shock protection in any meaningful modern sense. Incabloc and KIF shock systems arrived at Rolex with the A.296 caliber of the late 1940s. The 2574 predates that development and its Superbalance is a stability design, not a shock-protected balance. Owners of vintage 2574s should treat the watch as a pre-shock-protection piece: reasonable care, no sport wear, no accidental impacts.
Dial and hand variants

Documented dial signatures on the 2574 include "Royal," "Royalite," "Observatory," and "Imperial," paired with both center-seconds and sub-seconds layouts on a silvered base. The center-seconds dials carry a single long seconds hand from the dial centre and present a clean uncluttered face. The sub-seconds dials carry a small register at six o'clock with its own short seconds hand and read more like a conventional pre-war dress watch of the period. The Imperial Chronometer dial-detail shown above is the sub-seconds layout; the Royalite Observatory hero is the center-seconds layout. The following configurations are documented:
The most frequently surfaced configuration is a silvered dial with applied baton hour markers, "Rolex Oyster Royal" text, and sweep seconds. Clean, conservative, reads as a late-1930s dress watch. A less common variant substitutes printed Arabic numerals, on both Royal and Observatory dials, still with sweep seconds. Luminous radium dials with Arabic numerals and matching luminous hands appear on Royal-signed examples; radium-filled configurations on the 2574 tend to show heavy age-darkening, and cleanly white radium plots on a 2574 are a sign of restoration.
Hand configurations span leaf (most common on Royal-signed baton-dial examples), baton, and, on radium-dial configurations, luminous-filled pencil or spade hands. Blued steel leaf hands on an original-dial Royal are the most commonly surfaced handset. As with any watch of this age, matched patina between dial printing, lume, and hands is the primary indicator of originality; mismatched aging is the standard tell for a service replacement.
Auction and dealer record
The 2574 has no deep public auction trail. It has not appeared at Sotheby's, Christie's, Phillips, or Heritage in the indexed record; surfaced examples resolve through specialist dealers and smaller auction houses, with a documented range of roughly USD 1,500–4,000. Royal-signed steel examples with baton dials and leaf hands dominate the dealer corpus. Observatory-signed examples are thinner and tend to clear the market at the upper end when the dial is cleanly original; exceptional dial condition, matched patina, and period-correct hands are what pushes prices toward USD 4,000, and refinished dials or replacement hands sit at the lower end.
There is no auction-driven hype market here. A steel 2574 at five figures is out of step with the surfaced record. The dealer sample is thin enough that the Royal-to-Observatory ratio should be read as indicative rather than definitive, but the direction is clear: Royal dominates by a meaningful margin.
Collecting considerations
The outer-caseback reference engraving is the clearest authenticity anchor. It should be legible but not sharp; five-plus decades of normal wear will have softened it, though examples that spent most of their lives in drawers can retain crisper text. Extremely sharp or machine-perfect engraving is a warning sign, either a recent re-engraving on a worn caseback or a replacement caseback with modern work. Extremely soft or shallow engraving is compatible with heavy wear but should be cross-checked against the interior caseback for consistent period signatures.
The movement specification is the clearest cross-check when the engraving is ambiguous. A 2574 should carry a 9¾-ligne 17-jewel Aegler movement with Superbalance and Breguet overcoil, in either the center-seconds or sub-seconds variant. A 10½ caliber, a 15-jewel specification, or a dial layout that does not match the gear-train configuration of the movement variant present points either to a service replacement (possible on any 80-year-old watch) or to a misidentified reference. Because both layouts exist on documented 2574 examples, the dial layout alone cannot disqualify a candidate; the layout has to match what the movement underneath was built to drive.
Unrestored original dials are the exception. Most surviving 2574 dials have been refinished at some point, and UK, Swiss, and North American refinishers active through the mid-twentieth century produced work hard to distinguish from original without side-by-side comparison. An original Royal or Observatory dial with even patina, matched hand aging, and period-correct printing carries a substantial premium within the reference's modest range, but verification is specialist territory.
The documented USD 1,500–4,000 range is a reasonable anchor for current expectations. Exceptional condition, documented provenance, or a particularly clean Observatory dial can push toward the upper end. Nothing in the indexed record supports pricing above the mid-four-figure level in the normal course.
A 29.5 mm case is small by modern wrist-sizing conventions. The 2574 is a deliberately compact watch, a piece of boy's-size catalog history rather than a candidate for daily wear on a modern-sized wrist. On a period-appropriate strap, it reads as what it is: a pre-war dress Oyster sized for the late-1930s market.
Sources
- The Vintage Rolex Field Manual — Colin A. White, Morning Tundra
- BezelBase early Oyster reference index
- Rubber B — master list
- Internal research batch notes: src-batch-04-wwii-manual-oysters
- VintageWatchStraps (David Boettcher) — Rolex Oyster Case, Hermetic, Submarine research — David Boettcher, vintagewatchstraps.com