Mathematical Charts and Tables - Conversion Tables

Conversion Tables
As has been suggested already, instructive mathematical charts introduced unfamiliar units of measure. A number of handy tables also were produced to assist in conversions. Perhaps the earliest such chart in the collections dates from about 1814, and is designed to convert from units divisible by twelfths to decimal units. The size of conversion factor and the way the numbers are written suggest that it was made to convert from Massachusetts pounds and shillings to U.S. currency. By the mid-20th century, the dollar prevailed throughout the United States, and Americans were more concerned with understanding foreign currencies when they traveled abroad. Toward that end, some purchased a slide chart called the UNICON, which allowed them to convert between dollars and numerous foreign currencies when they knew the exchange rate.
Engineers have long needed to perform conversions as part of their work. In the first half of the 20th century, manufacturers sometimes distributed small advertising cards that listed decimal equivalents of parts of an inch. Larger tables might list a large number of useful conversion factors. New efforts to introduce metric weights and measures in the United States in the 1970s led to the distribution of a range of cards and slide charts that eased conversions. These were distributed by organizations ranging from the federal government to a manufacturer of outdoor clothing and camping supplies to a producer of food emulsifiers and flavorings.
"Mathematical Charts and Tables - Conversion Tables" showing 7 items.
Table of Decimal equivalents, the L. S. Starrett Co.
- Description
- Companies seeking to provide customers with advertisements they might consult repeatedly sometimes distributed convenient mathematical tables. This is an example of one of these. The small white plastic card has figures printed in black. The table gives decimal equivalents of parts of an inch ranging from 1/64” to 1” by sixty-fourth-inch increments.
- The other side of the card has three small drawings that show products of the L. S. Starrett Co. of Athol, Massachusetts. A mark on that side reads: THE TOOLS MECHANICS BUY (/) STANDARD FOR (/) ACCURACY, WORKMANSHIP, DESIGN, FINISH. A mark on the side of the card with the table indicates that it was made by Sanders Manufacturing Company of Nashville, Tennesee. That company has been in business since 1919.
- This table was found in the collections of what was then the Division of Work and Industry at the National Museum of American History.
- Compare 1988.3078.01.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1920-1960
- maker
- The L. S. Starrett Co.
- ID Number
- 1988.3078.02
- catalog number
- 1988.3078.02
- nonaccession number
- 1988.3078
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Mathematical Table, Decimal Equivalents of Parts of an Inch
- Description
- Companies seeking to provide customers with advertisements they might consult repeatedly sometimes distributed convenient mathematical tables. This is an example of one of these. The small white plastic card has figures printed in blue. The table gives decimal equivalents of parts of an inch ranging from 1/64” to 1” by sixty-fourth inch increments.
- The other side of the card has a small drawing that shows the wooden building occupied by Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Company of Providence, Rhode Island, in 1848. It also shows the plant at the time the table was distributed, when it occupied 33 acres.
- A mark on the back of the table reads: FORM 93 M.M.T. 7-43:100. Another mark reads: PRINTED IN U. S. A. This mark suggests that the card dates from 1943.
- This table was found in the collections of what was then the Division of Work and Industry at the National Museum of American History.
- Compare 1988.3078.02.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1943
- maker
- Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Company
- ID Number
- 1988.3078.01
- catalog number
- 1988.3078.01
- nonaccession number
- 1988.3078
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Slide Chart, UNICON Universal Currency Converter
- Description
- This Universal Currency Converter is a plastic-covered paper holder that contains a plastic-covered paper core. The user slides the core to match a foreign currency to the U.S. dollar, given a known exchange rate, and then reads off conversions for other amounts of U.S. currency. The table thus enables the user to avoid multiplication.
- The back of the Unicon contains metric to common measure conversion tables for distances, liquid volumes, weights, temperature, time zones, and “unofficial” exchange rates, as well as a 6-inch and 15 cm ruler. These rates have some historical interest for nations that no longer exist, such as West Germany and the U.S.S.R.; for currencies that have been merged, such as that of various Eurpoean nations; and for changes in exchange rates. A sheet of instructions for the Unicon also has another table of weights and measures and a list of equivalent clothing sizes. The instrument and its instructions are stored in a plastic case, meant to be carried in the pocket of travelers.
- A mark at the top front of the object reads: UNICON (/) UNIVERSAL CURRENCY CONVERTER (/) INSTANT * ACCURATE * ALWAYS CURRENT (/) CONVERTS ANY FOREIGN CURRENCY. A mark on the bottom front reads: Patent Pending Peoria Journal Star, Inc. 1971.
- This example of the Unicon was given to the Museum by one of its inventors, David J. Schlink (1931–2010). Schlink and Walter K. Schwarz received U.S.Patent No. 3,680,775 on 1 August 1972 for the Unicon. They assigned the patent to Schlink’s employer, The Peoria Journal Star, Inc., of Peoria, Illinois. Under the name PJS Enterprises, the newspaper manufactured and sold the Unicon for $3.95 retail. Distribution soon was taken over by Unicon Enterprises of Peoria, which sold a later version of the instrument, the Unicon II, as late as 1988. By this time, foreign travelers also were advised to take along electronic calculators for currency conversion.
- Schlink wrote two books on currency conversion, Money Sense Overseas (or,Unicon I), which sold in 1984 for $4.50 (ISBN 0912327006) and Unicon II, which sold in 1983 for $4.95 (ISBN 0912327014). It is not clear why Unicon II was copyrighted before Unicon I.
- References:
- Accession file.
- W. K. Schwarz and D. J. Schlink, “Calculating Device,” U.S. Patent 3,680,775, August 1, 1972.
- W. K. Schwarz and D. J. Schlink, “Calculating Device,” U.S. Patent 3,754,702, August 28, 1973.
- W. K. Schwarz and D. J. Schlink, “Conversion Calculator,” U.S. Design Patent 231,796, June 11, 1974.
- “Travel Log,” Boston Globe, January 14, 1973, p. A25.
- Tom Grimm, “How to Avoid Currency Problems When Overseas,” Chicago Tribune, June 25, 1975, p. B14.
- Betty Lukas, “Purse Is the Traveler’s Best Friend,” Los Angeles Times, September 8, 1985, p. G19.
- Jonathan Storm, “Adventurous Tours for Women over 30,” Philadelphia Inquirer, May 29, 1988.
- “David J. Schlink,” Peoria Journal Star, September 24, 2010.
- date made
- ca 1971
- maker
- Peoria Journal Star
- ID Number
- MA*333847
- catalog number
- 333847
- accession number
- 303772
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Metric Conversion Card
- Description
- In the 1970s, after metric units of measure had been adopted in Canada and Great Britain, some people in the United States advocated adoption of the metric system. The National Bureau of Standards of the U. S. Department of Commerce prepared this white plastic reference card to assist those wishing to use the unfamiliar units of measure. One side gave approximate conversion factors for computing metric measures from customary measures of length, area, mass and volume. This side also has a scale eight centimeters long divided to millimeters, and a chart with temperatures in degrees Fahrenheit along the top and temperatures in degrees centigrade along the bottom.
- The other side of the card gives factors for converting from metric to common measures of length, area, mass, volume, and temperature. There also is a scale three inches long divided to 1/16th of an inch.
- The card was a gift of machinist George A. Norton, a longtime employee of the National Museum of American History.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1972
- maker
- U.S. Department of Commerce. National Bureau of Standards
- ID Number
- 1990.3231.02
- catalog number
- 1990.3231.02
- nonaccession number
- 1990.3231
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Slide Chart, Metrics Made Easy
- Description
- In the 1970s, after metric units of measure had been adopted in Canada and Great Britain, some people in the United States advocated adoption of the metric system. A variety of special tables were made to help Americans convert between systems of measurement. This slide chart is one of them.
- The paper cardboard sleeve is joined with adhesive and printed in red, yellow, pink, black and white. The front contains a table for converting inches to millimeters, another for converting pints to liters, a third for converting feet to meters and a fourth for converting gallons to liters. The reverse has tables for miles/kilometers, ounces/grams, pounds/kilograms and oF/OC.
- A mark on the front reads: Metrics (/) made easy. Another reads: INCH/METRIC DIGITAL DIAL (/) A product of (/) Danatron (/) Corporation (3198 ‘C’, Airport Loop Drive, Costa Mesa, CA 92828. A mark on the edge of the slide reads (as best as can be deciphered): Copyright 1977 Nelson Taxel Woodmere N.Y. 11598 Printed in U.S.A.
- The object was found in the collections of the Division of Work and Industry of the National Museum of American History.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1977
- maker
- Danatron Corporation
- ID Number
- 1988.3078.03
- catalog number
- 1988.3078.03
- nonaccession number
- 1988.3078
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Wind Chill Calculator, a Slide Chart
- Description
- In the 1970s, after metric units of measure had been adopted in Canada and Great Britain, some people in the United States advocated adoption of the metric system. Holubar Mountaineering Ltd. of Boulder, Colorado, a manufacturer of outdoor clothing and camping supplies, distributed this cardboard slide chart. One side has a wind chill calculator. This had twelve columns of numbers with an actual temperature (given in both degrees Fahrenheit and degrees Celsius), at the head of each column. Figures in the column then gave the equivalent wind chill temperature for wind speeds in miles per hour (with the Fahrenheit scale) and in kilometers per hour (with the Celsius scale). Cold dangerous to health is indicated in shades of blue.
- The reverse side of the chart has columns for converting from metric to English measures of length, mass, volume, and area. A number line has Fahrenheit temperatures on the top and Celsius temperatures on the bottom.
- A mark on the sliding piece reads: GRAPHIC CALCULATOR CO., Barrington, Illinois 60010 Made in U.S.A. 12-76 -2349.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1976
- maker
- Holubar Mountaineering Ltd.
- manufacturer
- Graphic Calculator Co.
- ID Number
- 2001.3103.02
- nonaccession number
- 2001.3103
- catalog number
- 2001.3103.02
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
Grindsted Products Metric Converter Slide Rule
- Description
- This rule consists of a clear plastic envelope, glued together along the back bottom edge, and a white plastic slide. The front of the rule has six windows for reading off conversions between yards or feet and meters; centimeters and inches; square yards and square meters; square centimeters and square inches; cubic meters and cubic yards; and liters and imperial gallons or U.S. gallons. The front also has tables of equivalents and a scale for converting between Fahrenheit and Celsius temperatures. The top right corner is marked: GRINDSTED (/) PRODUCTS, INC. (/) Research for quality (/) 2701 ROCKCREEK PKY. (/) NORTH KANSAS CITY, (/) MISSOURI 64116. It is also marked: TEL: 816-842-6500 (/)TELEX: 4-2565 (/)GRINDSINC NKSC. A table for decimal equivalents between fractions, millimeters, and inches runs down the middle of the slide.
- The back has six windows for reading off conversions between pounds and kilograms; ounces and grams; PSI and atmospheres or kilograms per square centimeters; inches or centimeters of mercury and PSI; BTU and kilocalories or watt hours; and meter-kilograms and foot-pounds or joules. The back also has more tables of equivalents.
- Grindsted is a Danish brand for bulk food products, such as animal feed and emulsifiers for human foods. In 1989 it merged into the Danish conglomerate Danisco, which in turn was purchased by DuPont in 2011. The logo on this rule was in use from 1975 to 1991. Grindsted's factory in the Kansas City suburbs opened in 1975 and filed an annual report in 2012. Compare this rule to metric converters 1990.0689.01 and 1990.3231.01. For the style of manufacture, compare to 1988.0795.02.
- References: "Articles of Incorporation of Grinsted Products, Inc.," Missouri Secretary of State Business Name History, https://www.sos.mo.gov/BusinessEntity/soskb/Corp.asp?165854; "History - DuPont Danisco," http://www.danisco.com/about-dupont/duponttm-daniscor/history/; U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Trademark Electronic Search System.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1975-1991
- maker
- Grindsted Products, Inc.
- ID Number
- 1988.3078.05
- catalog number
- 1988.3078.05
- nonaccession number
- 1988.3078
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center

