Measuring & Mapping - Overview

Where, how far, and how much? People have invented an astonishing array of devices to answer seemingly simple questions like these. Measuring and mapping objects in the Museum's collections include the instruments of the famous—Thomas Jefferson's thermometer and a pocket compass used by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on their expedition across the American West. A timing device was part of the pioneering motion studies of Eadweard Muybridge in the late 1800s. Time measurement is represented in clocks from simple sundials to precise chronometers for mapping, surveying, and finding longitude. Everyday objects tell part of the story, too, from tape measures and electrical meters to more than 300 scales to measure food and drink. Maps of many kinds fill out the collections, from railroad surveys to star charts.
"Measuring & Mapping - Overview" showing 657 items.
Page 63 of 66
- No Image Available
Watch Dog Water Meter
- Description
- This is a disc water meter with split case and serial number 1,777,645 that fit a ⅝” pipe, and that was made by the Gamon Meter Company in Newark, New Jersey. The firm announced in 1927 that over 1,300,000 of its meters were in use in the United States and Canada. It merged with the meter division of the Worthington Pump & Machinery Corporation in 1933, to form the Worthington-Gamon Meter Company.
- date made
- ca 1930
- maker
- Gamon Meter Company
- ID Number
- PH*325891
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 325891
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Watch Dog 300 REV Water Meter
- Description
- This disc water meter was made by the Gamon Meter Company in Newark, New Jersey. It has a split case and fit a ⅝” pipe. The serial number has been obliterated. Ref: Gamon Meter Company, Meter Parts of the “Watch Dog” 300 Revolution Water Meter (Newark, New Jersey, n.d.).
- date made
- ca 1909-ca 1933
- maker
- Gamon Meter Company
- ID Number
- PH*325893
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 325893
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Worthington Water Meter Model D
- Description
- This is a disc water meter with frost-proof bottom and serial number 994,607, that fits a ¾” pipe, and that was made at the Worthington Hydraulic Works in Harrison, New Jersey. Worthington introduced its disc meter in 1905, and ceased making meters under its own name in 1933.
- Ref: Worthington Meters, Disc Pattern (Harrison, New Jersey, 1921), pp. 11-13.
- date made
- ca 1905-1933
- maker
- Worthington Hydraulic Works
- ID Number
- PH*325894
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 325894
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Worthington Model D Water Meter
- Description
- This is a disk water meter with frost-proof bottom and serial number 525,131, that fits a ⅝” x ¾” pipe, and that was made at the Worthington Hydraulic Works in Harrison, New Jersey. Worthington introduced its disc meter in 1905, and ceased making meters under its own name in 1933.
- Ref: Worthington Meters, Disc Pattern (Harrison, New Jersey, 1921), pp. 11-13.
- date made
- ca 1905-ca 1933
- maker
- Worthington Hydraulic Works
- ID Number
- PH*325895
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 325895
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Worthingon Water Meter
- Description
- This is a disc water meter with split case and serial number 1,375,979, made at the Worthington Hydraulic Works in Harrison, New Jersey. Worthington began making disc meters in 1903, and merged with the Gamon Meter Company to form the Worthington-Gamon Meter Company in 1933.
- date made
- ca 1903-ca 1933
- maker
- Worthington Hydraulic Works
- ID Number
- PH*325896
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 325896
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Worthington Model R Water Meter
- Description
- This is a disc water meter with split case and serial number 1,798,453 that fit a ⅝” pipe, and that was made at the Worthington Hydraulic Works in Harrison, New Jersey. Worthington began making disc meters in 1903, and merged with the Gamon Meter Company in 1933 to form the Worthington-Gamon Meter Company.
- date made
- ca 1903-ca 1933
- ID Number
- PH*325897
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 325897
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Trident Water Meter
- Description
- This is a disc meter marked “TRIDENT COMPANY 2 INCH” and “NEPTUNE METER COMPANY NEW YORK.” The Trident was based on designs patented by John Thomson, a prolific inventor and member of the American Society of Civil Engineers.
- date made
- 1892-1945
- maker
- Neptune Meter Company
- ID Number
- PH*329736
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 329736
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Badger Water Meter
- Description
- This is a turbine compound meter made by the Badger Meter Manufacturing Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
- date made
- ca 1905-ca 1960
- maker
- Badger Meter Manufacturing Company
- ID Number
- PH*329737
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 329737
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Watch Dog Compound Water Meter
- Description
- This water meter combines a disc meter and a current meter.
- Ref: Gamon Meter Company ad in American City (1927).
- date made
- probably 1920s
- ID Number
- PH*329738
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 329738
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
- No Image Available
Trident Style 3 Water Meter
- Description
- This is a disc water meter that fit a 2” pipe, and that was made by the Neptune Meter Company in Long Island City, New York. The Trident was based on designs patented by John Thomson, a prolific inventor and member of the American Society of Civil Engineers. In 1907, Neptune described the Style 3 as the “only meter that can be adjusted for different pressures.” Later trade literature noted that this model was designed for intermediate use, between “the usual house service, requiring but a small volume at moderate rates of flow and that of a manufacturing plant or similar service requiring a larger flow of water.”
- Ref: Neptune Meter Company ad in Journal of the New England Water Works Association 21 (1907): vi.
- Neptune Meter Company, Trident Meter Price List (1942), p. 5.
- date made
- 1907-1965
- maker
- Neptune Meter Company
- ID Number
- PH*329739
- accession number
- 245003
- catalog number
- 329739
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center
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