I was thinking (Ouch - it hurt!!
) Coventry's industrial history is probably unique. It's hard to see any of it happening - cycles, cars, etc - if the watch industry hadn't mushroomed as it did. Yet Coventry wasn't the only city that had a watchmkaing industry - London, Birmingham, and Prescot (Liverpool) all had substantial watch industries - London still has a watchmaking district - mainly around St John's Square, Clerkenwell.
Yet, nowhere else did watchmaking lead on as it did in Coventry to cycles, motor cycles, cars, aircraft, and machine tools. In Prescot, it just fizzled out around 1910, when the Lancashire Watch Co closed. The Birmingham industry, mainly Ehrhardt's, continued into the 1920s, and of course, Aaron Lufkin Dennison's watch case factory carried on until the 1960s (and still exists as part of Avery Dennison). The London industry carried on, though much of it was concerned with imported Swiss movements, parts, cased in Clerkenwell or Cheapside. In none of these places did it go as it did in Coventry.
It's doubly intriguing, because so many "Coventry" watchmakers were from elsewhere - as well as the cities mentioned, Scotland, Ireland, Hertfordshire; why didn't they just up sticks and move elsewhere, like when they came to Coventry? The German immigrants appeared to have done so.
I wonder if anyone has an answer as to why this happened in Coventry, and not elsewhere!