The Progress of Invention in the Nineteenth Century. by Edward W. Byrn
CHAPTER XIV.
2050 words | Chapter 55
THE TYPEWRITER.
OLD ENGLISH TYPEWRITER OF 1714--THE BURT TYPEWRITER OF 1829--
PROGIN’S FRENCH MACHINE OF 1833--THURBER’S PRINTING MACHINE OF
1843--THE BEACH TYPEWRITER--THE SHOLES TYPEWRITER, THE FIRST OF THE
MODERN FORM, COMMERCIALLY DEVELOPED INTO THE REMINGTON--THE
CALIGRAPH--SMITH-PREMIER--THE BOOK TYPEWRITER AND OTHERS.
Occupying an intermediate place between the old-fashioned scribe and the
printer, the typewriter has in the latter part of the Nineteenth Century
established a distinct and important avocation, and has become a
necessary factor in modern business life. Chirography, or hand writing,
reflecting, as it did, the idiosyncrasies of each writer, was not only
slow, but when employed was, in most cases, in the haste and press of
active business reduced to an illegible scrawl. For the use of reporters
and others requiring extra speed, stenography, or short hand, was
resorted to, but there was a distinct need for some easy, quick,
legible, and uniform record of the busy man’s correspondence and copy
work, and this the modern typewriter has supplied.
Like most other important inventions, the typewriter did not spring into
existence all at once, for while the practical embodiment in really
useful machines has only taken place since about 1868, there had been
many experiments and some success attained at a much earlier date. The
British patent to Henry Mills. No. 395 of 1714, is the earliest record
of efforts in this direction. At this early date no drawings were
attached to patents, and the specification dwells more on the function
of the machine than the instrumentalities employed. No record of the
construction of this machine remains in existence, and it may fairly be
considered a lost art. In quaint and old-fashioned English, the patent
specification proceeds as follows:
“_ANNE_, by the grace of God, &c., to all whom these presents shall
come, greeting: _WHEREAS_, our trusty and well-beloved subject, Henry
Mills, hath by his humble peticon represented vnto vs, that he has by
his greate study, paines, and expence, lately invented, and brought to
perfection “_An Artificial Machine_ or _Method_ for the _Impressing_ or
_Transcribing Letters Singly_ or _Progressively_ one after another as in
_Writing_, whereby all _Writing whatever_ may be _Engrossed_ in _Paper_
or _Parchment_ so _Neat_ and _Exact_ as not to be Distinguished from
_Print_, that the said _Machine_ or Method, may be of greate vse in
_Settlements_ and _Publick Recors_, the Impression being deeper and more
Lasting that any other _Writing_, and not to be erased, or
_Counterfeited_ without _Manifest Discovery_, and having therefore
humbly prayed vs to grant him our Royall Letters Patents, for the sole
vse of his said Invention for the term of fourteen yeares.”
“_Know Yee_, that wee,” etc.
The first American typewriter of which any record remains is that
described in the patent granted to W. A. Burt, July 23, 1829. It was
called a “Typographer.” It had a segment bearing the letters of the
alphabet and corresponding notches acting as an index. A superposed
lever, which could be worked up and down, and also moved laterally, was
provided with a series of type, arranged in a segmental curve, so that
any type could be brought into place on the subjacent paper by swinging
the lever over to and down into the proper notch in the index segment
below. A restored model of this is to be found in the U. S. Patent
Office.
[Illustration: FIG. 135.--FRENCH TYPEWRITER, 1833.]
The first organized typewriter in which separate key levers were
provided for each type is a French invention. It is to be found in the
French patent to M. Progin (Xavier), of Marseilles, No. 3,748, Sept. 6,
1833 (Brevets d’Invention, Vol. 37, 1st Series, pl. 36). It was called a
Typographic Machine, and is shown in the illustration (Fig. 135).
Upright key levers _s_ are arranged in a circle around a circular plate
_n_. They have hook-shaped handles at the upper end, and terminate
below in forks that are pivoted to the shanks of type hammers, to raise
and lower them. These hammers are inked from a pad, and at a central
point deliver a printing blow on the paper below. The paper is held
stationary, and the whole nest of levers was moved over the paper for
each letter printed. The circular index plate _n_ had marked on it
opposite the respective levers the letters and characters represented by
said levers. Besides printing letters, the device was to be used for
printing music, and for making stereotype plates.
[Illustration: FIG. 136.--THURBER TYPEWRITER.]
On Aug. 26, 1843, Charles Thurber, of Worcester, Mass., took out Pat.
No. 3,228 for a Printing Machine. Under the patent he constructed the
machine shown in Fig. 136. This differed somewhat from the form shown in
his patent, in that the machine shows a paper feed roller which does not
appear in the patent. This machine was found among the effects of Mr.
Thurber after having lain neglected and unnoticed for many years, and
its damaged parts were restored by Mr. H. R. Cummings, of Worcester. The
types are carried on the lower ends of a circular series of depressible
bars, which are spring seated in a horizontal rotatable wheel. By
turning the wheel any type can be brought to the front, and a stationary
guide controls its descent as it makes the impression. An inking roller
is seen on the right, which inks the faces of the type. In front of the
type wheel is a horizontal roller to which the sheet of paper is
attached by clips. Finger pawls, working into ratchets at the ends of
the roller, serve to rotate it after each line is printed. By means of a
handle, seen projecting from the right hand side of the frame, the
roller is shifted longitudinally on its axis rod after each letter has
been printed. This appears to be the first embodiment of the feed roller
rotating to bring a new line into range, and having also a longitudinal
feed, but as these movements were required to be separately executed by
the operator, the work of the machine was necessarily very slow. Just at
what time this old Thurber machine was constructed it is impossible to
state in the light of present information, but as the feed roller did
not appear in Thurber’s patent of 1843, it is possible that the claim to
authorship of the feed roller having both a rotary and a longitudinal
movement may be maintained in behalf of J. Jones, whose Pat. No. 8,980
of June 1, 1852, appears to be the first dated record of such a feed
roller. Jones was also the first to provide a spring to automatically
retract the paper carriage to the position for beginning a new line, the
spring being put under tension by the movement of the paper carriage in
printing.
[Illustration: FIG. 137.--BEACH TYPEWRITER.]
Prominent among those whose genius has served to perfect the typewriter
occurs the name of A. E. Beach, for many years of the firm of Munn &
Co., and well known to the readers of the _Scientific American_. Mr.
Beach’s first model of a typewriter was made in 1847. It printed upon a
sheet of paper supported on a roller, carried in a sliding frame worked
by a ratchet and pawl. It had a weight for running the frame, letter and
line spacing keys, paper feeding devices, line signal bell, and carbon
tissue. It had a series of finger keys connected with printing levers
which were arranged in a circle, and struck at a common center. This
machine was said to have worked well, but was laid aside for further
improvement. In the meantime he constructed a typewriter to print in
raised letters, without ink. This machine, which was intended primarily
for the use of the blind, is illustrated in Figs. 137 and 138. It was
first publicly exhibited in operation at the Crystal Palace Exhibition
of the American Institute in the fall of 1856, where it attracted great
attention and took the gold medal. The embossed letters were printed on
a ribbon of paper which ran centrally through the machine. The printing
levers were arranged in a circle in pairs, one riding on the top of the
other. When the operator pressed a key, the two printing levers of each
pair answering to the letter key were brought together, the paper being
between them. The printing type were at the extremities of the levers,
one lever having a raised letter, and its mate a sunken or intaglio
letter, which, seizing the paper strip between them, like the jaws of a
pair of pincers, impressed therein an embossed letter. The patent for
this machine was granted June 24, 1856, No. 15,164, but the machine
showed a much higher degree of development than appeared in the patent.
This machine was the earliest representative of the circular basket of
radially swinging type levers, combined with finger keys assembled in a
keyboard at one side, which is now an almost universal feature, and the
suggestion which it handed down to subsequent inventors has doubtless
done much to make the typewriter the practical machine that it is
to-day.
[Illustration: FIG. 138.--CENTRAL SECTION OF BEACH TYPEWRITER.]
Up to the year 1868, however, typewriting machines were mere
illustrations of sporadic genius occuring here and there as the pet
hobby of some humanitarian seeking to help the blind, or supplement the
deficiencies of the tremulous fingers of the paralytic. It had not yet
come to be regarded as of any special use, nor had even the demand for
such a device been forcibly felt, until the last quarter of the
Nineteenth Century began to accumulate its wonderful momentum of
progress and prosperity. The man whose genius finally brought forth a
practical typewriter, and made a permanent place for it in the daily
business of the world, was C. Latham Sholes. As joint inventor with C.
Glidden and S. W. Soule, all of Milwaukee, he took out patents No.
79,265, of June 23, 1868, and No. 79,868, of July 14, 1868. These,
together with Sholes’ Pat. No. 118,491, of Aug. 29, 1871, formed the
working basis of the first typewriters that went into office use. These
typewriters were first introduced to the general public under the
management of the original inventors (Sholes, Soule and Glidden) about
1873, and at first used only capital letters. On Aug. 27, 1878, a
further patent. No. 207,559, was granted to Sholes, and about this time,
after five years of uncertain and precarious business existence, the
machine was taken for manufacture to E. Remington & Sons, at Ilion, N.
Y. Since this time the well-known “Remington” has built up for itself a
reputation and a commercial importance that has given it first place
among typewriters. In the nine years from 1873 to 1882, it is said that
less than 8,000 machines had been manufactured. In the year 1882
Wyckoff, Seamans & Benedict obtained control of the machine, and during
the fourteen years following it is said that nearly 200,000 “Remingtons”
were made and sold. It is said that 1,000 men are now employed in
making this machine, and that the present output is about 800 machines a
week, despite the fact that it has a half dozen worthy competitors for
public favor. The modern Remington, seen in Fig. 139, is too well known
to require special description. Besides the Sholes patents, it embodies
the improvements covered by patents to Clough & Jenne, No. 199,263, Jan.
15, 1878; Jenne, No. 478,964, July 12, 1892, and No. 548,553, Oct. 22,
1895, and also a patent to Brooks, No. 202,923, April 30, 1878, a
characteristic feature of which latter is the location of both a capital
and small letter on the same striking lever, and the shifting of the
paper roller by a key to bring either the large or small letter into
printing range.
[Illustration: FIG. 139.--REMINGTON TYPEWRITER.]
The earliest rival of the Remington was the Caligraph, made by the
American Writing Machine Co. This well-known machine, introduced in the
decade of the eighties, was made under the patents of G. Y. N. Yost,
March 18, 1884, No. 295,469; March 17, 1885, No. 313,973; and July 30,
1889, No. 408,061. The most modern form of the Caligraph is known as the
“New Century,” which is shown in the accompanying illustration, Fig.
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