Update 4/23/25: Neil Armstrong’s former Omega, which he received to commemorate the moon landing, is now the most expensive Speedmaster in history. After dozens of online bids that culminated in a live sale, the watch sold for $2.1 million.
If youâre an Omega diehard, you better start rifling through the couch cushions, because youâre gonna need every spare penny: Neil Armstrongâs solid-gold Omega Speedmaster ref. BA145.022âone of just 28 pieces made for NASA astronauts and personnelâis coming under the hammer for the first time, with a tidy estimated sale price of $2 million. Presented by RR Auctions Live in Cambridge, MA, on April 17, the auction is sure to be a sensation. Expect bidding by interested private parties, super-collectors, and Omega itself.
The story goes something like this: Back in 1969, Omega produced the 28 Speedies in question and presented them to NASA astronauts at a gala dinner in Houston in November of that year. (President Richard Nixon and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew were offered two of the watches but had to decline the gift.) Each watch featured an inscribed caseback, with Armstrongâs reading thusly: âAstronaut Neil A. Armstrong, to mark manâs conquest of space with time, through time, on time, Gemini 8, Apollo 8, No. 17.â (The quip about being âon timeââespecially given President Kennedyâs insistence that man make it to the Moon by the end of the 1960sâis particularly fun.)
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This is not, to be clear, one of the NASA-issued stainless steel Speedmasters that were worn on the Moonâor, in Armstrongâs case, left in the lunar module as a backup. (Buzz Aldrinâs watch was lost while in transit to NASA, and Armstrongâs is on display at the Smithsonian.) But the fact that this particular watch was given as a gift by Omega to the first man to walk on the Moon has the potential to add a serious premium over similar examples that have come under the hammer recently: Fellow astronaut Michael Collinsâ watch hammered for $765,000 in 2022, and Walter âWallyâ Schirraâs achieved $1.9 million that same year. Schirra was the first NASA astronaut to wear a Speedmaster in space, but Armstrong’s name and legend arguably eclipse this notable horological event.
Mark Armstrong, Neilâs son, noted that his father enjoyed wearing the watch on special occasions, and indeed it appears well loved, with a scratched bezel and a gouged caseback. Furthermore, part of the saleâs proceeds will be donated to causes important to Armstrong. Itâs anyoneâs guess as to whether the watch will achieve its estimateâ¦or rocket past it into deep space.
A testament to the enterprising spirit of post-War Americaâand Switzerland, for that matterâArmstrongâs watch evokes strong feelings of pride for many, especially those who were lucky enough to hear him utter those now-famous words on television in the summer of 1969. Hereâs hoping Omega raises its own paddle, for one is reminded of those famous words of Indiana Jones: âIt belongs in a museum!â