Flowcharting Templates

Introduction

In the years following World War II, electronic computer makers and users developed techniques for programming of the newly invented devices. Fledgling manufacturers sought to communicate possible uses of their machines to customers and to train people to program them. To assist in these endeavors, they used special diagrams called flow charts. By the mid-1950s, such efforts had generated a new drawing instrument, the flowcharting template, a plastic rectangle with the symbols needed to draw flow charts cut out of it.

Resources

Nathan Ensmenger, “The Multiple Meanings of a Flowchart,” Information & Culture 51, no. 3 (August 2016), pp. 321–51.

Thomas Haigh, Mark Priestley, and Crispin Rope, ENIAC in Action: Making and Remaking the Modern Computer, Cambridge: MIT Press (2016) esp. 74-79, 204-206. This article discusses charts made for the ENIAC computer.

Grace M. Hopper, The Calculation of Extended Insurance, Philadelphia, 1950. A photocopy of this document is in the collection of unprocessed computer documentation at the National Museum of American History. It uses flowcharts to describe the UNIVAC I computer.

Robert J. Rossheim, “Report on Proposed American Standard Flowchart Symbols for Information Processing,” Communications of the ACM  6, no. 10 (October 1963), pp. 599-604.

This plastic template has ten flow chart symbols. A scale of inches divided to sixths is on the right, a scale of inches divided to tenths on the left, a scale of inches divided to twelfths at the top, and a scale of inches divided to sixteenths at the bottom.
Description
This plastic template has ten flow chart symbols. A scale of inches divided to sixths is on the right, a scale of inches divided to tenths on the left, a scale of inches divided to twelfths at the top, and a scale of inches divided to sixteenths at the bottom. A mark reads: ElectroData (/) DIVISION OF BURROUGHS.
Burroughs purchased Electrodata in 1956 and began selling the Electrodata Datatron 220 in the following year. Trade literature indicates that the Electrodata Division of Burroughs continued until at least 1960.
Location
Currently not on view
date made
ca 1957
maker
Electrodata Division of Burroughs
ID Number
2005.0055.11
accession number
2005.0055
catalog number
2005.0055.11

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