Computers & Business Machines

Imagine the loss, 100 years from now, if museums hadn't begun preserving the artifacts of the computer age. The last few decades offer proof positive of why museums must collect continuously—to document technological and social transformations already underway.
The museum's collections contain mainframes, minicomputers, microcomputers, and handheld devices. Computers range from the pioneering ENIAC to microcomputers like the Altair and the Apple I. A Cray2 supercomputer is part of the collections, along with one of the towers of IBM's Deep Blue, the computer that defeated reigning champion Garry Kasparov in a chess match in 1997. Computer components and peripherals, games, software, manuals, and other documents are part of the collections. Some of the instruments of business include adding machines, calculators, typewriters, dictating machines, fax machines, cash registers, and photocopiers


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Photocell
- Description
- Jakob Kunz (1874-1938), an important pioneer in the development of photoelectric cells, made this potassium hydride cell in the 1920s. Attached to the 12-inch refracting telescope at the Lick Observatory, it used by Joel Stebbins, by Gerald Kron, and by Mary Elizabeth Cummings.
- Born and trained in Switzerland, Kunz began teaching physics at the University of Illinois in 1909. Two years later, he convinced Joel Stebbins, director of the astronomical observatory on campus, to use one of his photocells to chart the fluctuating magnitudes of eclipsing binary stars. The experiment was indeed a success. In the words of Gerald Kron, an astronomer who would later work with Stebbins—and who gave this example to the Smithsonian—Stebbins "furnished the continuity that lead to the permanent establishment of photoelectric photometry as one of the most important tools of modern astronomers."
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1920s
- maker
- Kunz, Jakob
- ID Number
- 1982.0623.01
- catalog number
- 1982.0623.01
- accession number
- 1982.0623
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Pantograph Sold by the Frederick Post Company, Model 1495
- Description
- A pantograph is an instrument used to duplicate drawings, at different scales if need be. This example consists of four wooden arms held together with pins and a screw-eye with a wooden anchor support under one arm. Two metal screw-eyes are placed in holes which are numbered from 1 to 10. There is a tracer point in one arm, but there no longer is a pencil point.
- A mark stamped on one of the wooden bars reads: 1495 (/) POSTS. Below this is stamped an image of an eagle clutching a shield that is stamped P. This trademark appeared on the first page of the Frederick Post Company Catalog in 1903. By 1921, another trademark was used.
- The pantograph is number 1495 in the catalog of The Frederick Post Company. The company was started by Frederick Post (1862-1936), a native of Hamburg who emigrated to the United States in 1885 and soon settled in Chicago. By the time of the 1900 U.S. Census, he was a manufacturer of artist's materials there. Post imported drawing instruments and slide rules as well as manufacturing them. Whether his firm made this pantograph is not known.
- The instrument is from the estate of the American inventor of tabulating machines Herman Hollerith, Jr. In 1889, Hollerith introduced a device for punching cards for tabulating machines that was called a pantograph card punch. This pantograph dates from after that invention.
- For information about the pantograph card punch, see MA.312896.
- References:
- U. S. Census 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930.
- Catalogs of the Frederick Post Company.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1903-1922
- ID Number
- 1977.0114.04
- accession number
- 1977.0114
- catalog number
- 335636
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
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Spectrometer
- Description
- This sturdy brass instrument on a black iron base was “designed to meet the demand for a high class spectrometer for use in college and technical laboratories.” The horizontal circle is 15 cm diameter, graduated on silver 1’ and read by verniers and microscopes to 20” of arc. A brass tag reads “WM. GAERTNER & CO. / MAKERS / CHICAGO.”
- Ref: Wm. Gaertner & Co., Optical Instruments (Chicago, 1920), pp. 1-2.
- Wm. Gaertner & Co. ad in Science 56 (Dec. 29, 1922): xiii.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1900-1920
- maker
- Gaertner
- ID Number
- PH.334638
- catalog number
- 334638
- accession number
- 312090
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Diagnostic Chart for Individual Difficulties. Fundamental Processes in Arithmetic, Teacher's Diagnosis
- Description
- Guy T. Buswell and Lenore John published this chart in about 1925 through the Public School Publishing Company of Bloomington, Illinois. The entire package included directions, a pupil's work sheet, a teacher's diagnostic chart, and a pupil's work sheet diagnostic chart. This is the teacher’s diagnostic chart. It was coauthored by Lenore John (1902-1992) when she was a graduate student in education at the University of Chicago.
- John was the granddaughter, daughter and niece of ministers in the United Brethren Church. Born in Pennsylvania, she moved about with her family as her father, Lewis Franklin John, took various clerical and faculty positions. One of these was at York College in York, Nebraska. Lenore John enrolled in the college and took courses in education, graduating in 1921. She taught high school mathematics in Nebraska and Wisconsin. By about 1927, she was teaching mathematics at the University of Chicago’s Laboratory School and doing graduate work in education. In 1926, she assisted Guy T. Buswell (1891-1994), another York College graduate and child of a United Brethren minister. Buswell was a faculty member in the Education Department at Chicago, They prepared a Diagnostic Chart for Fundamental Processes in Arithmetic, of which this is an example. The Buswell-John chart, as it came to be called by some, remained in use for decades. Buswell and John hoped that their chart would be used to determine the areas of arithmetic in which a student required further work. It was a'diagnosis" of problems rather than a prognosis of future achievement. In later years Buswell and John collaborted on a series of arithmetic textbooks.
- John went on to completer her MA dissertation at Chicago in 1927, and remained on the staff of the Laboratory School, continuing her research in mathematics education. She would serve as vice-president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics from 1950-1952. In the 1960s, she played an active role in work of one of the “new math” programs, the School Mathematics Study Group. She received an award from the Illinois branch of the NCTM (the ICTM) as late as 1967, and died in Chicago in 1992.
- This example of the test is from the personal collection of U. S. government psychologist and university teacher in education Samuel Kavruck.
- For a related object, the pupil's worksheet, see 1990.0034.07
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1925
- maker
- John, Lenore
- Buswell, G. T.
- publisher
- Public School Publishing Company
- maker
- John, Lenore
- ID Number
- 1990.0034.164
- catalog number
- 1990.0034.164
- accession number
- 1990.0034
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Victor Adding Machine
- Description
- This full-keyboard, printing adding machine has a steel frame painted black and green There are eight columns of color-coded black and white metal keys with digits written on paper and covered with clear plastic (the keys resemble those on early typewriters). Complementary digits are indicated on the keys. The total appears in eight glass-covered metal windows over number dials at the front of the machine. There are total and non-add keys left of the number keys and a repeat key on the right. The total key also clears the machine. A metal crank with a wooden handle on the right of the machine operates it. Behind the keyboard is a two-colored ribbon, printing mechanism, and fixed narrow carriage. There are nine type bars, eight for digits and one for special characters. There is a serrated edge for tearing off the paper tape.
- The machine is marked on the front and behind the keyboard: VICTOR. It is marked on the back: PATENTED (/) JUNE 20,1919 - APRIL 13th,1920 (/) MFD. BY (/) VICTOR ADDING MACHINE CO. (/) CHICAGO, U.S.A. (/) OTHER PATENTS PENDING. The serial number, on a metal tag attached to the bottom of the machine, is 24843.
- This adding machine was purchased in 1922 and used until 1982 by Samuel Bernstein in his capacity as Secretary-Treasurer of Wilner Branch 367 of Workmen’s Circle. Workmen’s Circle was a fraternal organization organized about 1900 to promote self-help among Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. Mr. Bernstein was 95 years old when he relinquished his position.
- This model sold for $100 in 1924.
- References:
- J. H. McCarthy, American Digest of Business Machines, 1924, p. 59, 543.
- Accession file.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1923
- maker
- Victor Adding Machine Company
- ID Number
- 1982.0475.01
- catalog number
- 1982.0475.01
- accession number
- 1982.0475
- maker number
- 24843
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Dietzgen 738C Bow Compass with Pen Point
- Description
- This steel instrument has a needle point on one leg and a pen point on the other. A cross-hatched handle is attached to a ring, which in turn is attached to the legs. A screw goes through both legs, with the nut for setting the compass at a desired width outside the leg with the needle point. Additional thumbscrews allow adjusting of the needle and pen points.
- The instrument appears to be a Champion Bow Pen, model number 738C, advertised in 1926 by the Eugene Dietzgen Company of Chicago. The leg with the needle point has handwriting: P M LARSEN. Engraved on the other leg is the word EXCELLO and the Dietzgen logo.
- Reference: Catalog of Eugene Dietzgen Co., 12th ed. (Chicago, 1926), 59, 74.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1926
- maker
- Eugene Dietzgen Company
- ID Number
- 1981.0933.22
- accession number
- 1981.0933
- catalog number
- 1981.0933.22
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Autopoint Mechanical Pencil
- Description
- This 5-3/4" black plastic and chrome-plated mechanical pencil is marked near its top: CHICAGO Autopoint USA (/) PATD AND PATS PEND. The word "Autopoint" is in script. The end of the pencil above the mark uncaps to reveal an eraser. A metal clip allows the pencil to be secured in a shirt pocket. The pen is stored in a rectangular gray cardboard box marked: Pencil Used by H H sr. (c[h]rome plated).
- Autopoint began manufacturing mechanical pencils in Chicago in 1918. Inventors assigned at least 30 patents to Autopoint between 1918 and 1929. One of the patents referred to on this pencil was taken out by Frank Deli of Chicago, for a metal pin that screwed into a threaded cylinder inside the pencil tip and thus acted to propel the lead. The diameter of the pin suggests the lead width was about 1 mm. The body of the pencil was to be made from bakelite or a similar plastic. Deli applied for his patent in 1921, although it was not granted until 1925. Bakelite, the plastics manufacturer, owned an interest in Autopoint from the 1920s to the 1940s. After several corporate acquisitions and reorganizations, Autopoint moved to Janesville, Wisc., in 1979, where it continues operations.
- His daughter-in-law reported that Herman Hollerith Sr. owned this pencil. Hollerith (1860–1929) trained as a mining engineer. He joined the U.S. Census Office in 1879, where he pioneered the development of punch cards for tabulating machines. These machines dramatically sped up the processing of data in the 1890 census. In 1896 he founded the Tabulating Machine Company, which merged with three other companies in 1911 and became the International Business Machines Corporation (IBM) in 1924. Hollerith retired in 1921 and raised cattle on a farm in Maryland until his death, so he presumably acquired the pencil during his retirement. For depictions and examples of Hollerith machines, see 1977.0503.01, 1977.0503.02, and 2011.3121.01, MA.312896, MA.335634, MA.335635, and MA.333894. See also the NMAH object group on tabulating machines, http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/tabulating-equipment.
- References: Autopoint, Inc., "About Us," http://autopointinc.com/about-us; Frank C. Deli, "Pencil" (U.S. Patent 1,552,123 issued September 1, 1925); Robert L. Bolin, "Web Resources Concerning the Mechanical Pencil Industry in Chicago," http://unllib.unl.edu/Bolin_resources/pencil_page/index.htm; William R. Aul, "Herman Hollerith: Data Processing Pioneer," Think, November 1972, http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/builders/builders_hollerith.html; United States Census Bureau, "Herman Hollerith," http://www.census.gov/history/www/census_then_now/notable_alumni/herman_hollerith.html.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1921-1929
- maker
- Autopoint, Inc.
- ID Number
- 1977.0503.03
- catalog number
- 336122
- accession number
- 1977.0503
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Comptometer Model J With Operator's Lock
- Description
- This full keyboard key-driven non-printing adding machine has eight columns of keys. These are colored white and green, with digits and complementary digits. Keys for odd digits are concave, those for even ones are flat. Key stems become taller going from front to back. The mechanism has a steel cover painted brown. Decimal markers, number wheels, and subtraction levers are at the front of the machine, and a zeroing crank is on the right side. The holes showing the nine number wheels are covered with clear plastic. A red button above the keyboard on the right, and a black knob with an arrow on it is above the keyboard on the left.
- The machine is marked to the left of the keyboard with serial number J279,961. It is marked across the front of the machine: Comptometer. It is marked on a metal plaque on top of the machine in back of the keyboard: TRADE COMPTOMETER MARK. It is also marked there with a series of patent dates, the last of which is: NOV.2.20. It was received with a metal tag that reads: 14.
- The Model J Comptometer was introduced by Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company of Chicago in 1926. Improved design and construction reduced the effort of operating the keys, compared to earlier models. This model also featured a operator’s lock, which locked the Comptometer so that new data could not be entered when a calculation was entered. Rotating the black knob so that the arrow points to the front locked the machine. This example came from the collection of Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company, and was given to the Smithsonian by the successor company, Victor Comptometer Corporation.
- References: U.S. Patent 1,927,856 (granted September 26, 1933).
- Felt & Tarrant, Accession Journal, 1991.3107.06.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1926
- maker
- Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company
- ID Number
- MA.323644
- maker number
- J279,961
- catalog number
- 323644
- accession number
- 250163
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Comptometer Study Model 520 Series (?) Adding Machine Section
- Description
- This is a model of a section of a Comptometer. It has a single column of white plastic numeral keys. Alternate keys are concave (odd digits) and flat (even digits). Left of the number keys are two red keys. One is marked: UNIVERSAL (/) KEY (/) DRIVE. The other is marked: INDIVIDUAL (/) KEY (/) DRIVE. The section of a metal case under the keys is painted brown. The mechanism is steel. The model has no numeral wheels, no zeroing lever, no base, and no cover.
- During the late 1920s, J. A. V. Turck of Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company worked on inventing an adding machine that could either be driven by striking individual keys (have an individual key drive, in his language), or by setting keys and then driving them simultaneously (having a universal key drive, in his language). This object relates to that effort. Comptometers had traditionally used individual key drive.
- References:
- U.S. Patent 1869872, granted August 2, 1932.
- Felt & Tarrant, Accession Journal, #134, 135, 136, 150.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1927
- maker
- Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company
- ID Number
- MA.323640
- catalog number
- 323640
- accession number
- 250163
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
American Adding Machine Model 4
- Description
- This lever-set printing adding machine is manually operated. It has a plain steel case painted black. Seven levers that move in circular arcs between slots in the front of the case. The case is painted along the edges of the slots with the digits from 0 to 9 (large and in black and white) and 9 to 0 (small and in red). The large digits are used in addition, and the small ones in subtraction. A corrugation or depression in the cover marks each digit. Digits are set by placing the index finger in the corresponding depression and raising the lever by the thumb until it is stopped by the finger. They are entered by moving down a metal handle with a wooden knob on the right side. If the red clear key to the left of the levers is pressed down, moving this knob zeros the machine.
- The result appears in eight windows above the levers. Another handle, on the left side, zeros digits set incorrectly (this handle is not screwed in). The printing mechanism at the back top of the machine prints up to eight digits by striking a black and red ribbon. There is no paper tape. A loose metal piece is painted black. There are four rubber feet.
- The machine is marked on the front: AMERICAN (/) ADDING MACHINE (/) MODEL 4 (/) AMERICAN CAN COMPANY (/) PAT. AUGUST 27, 1912 (/) OTHER PATENTS PENDING CHICAGO, ILL. It is marked below the levers: PAY ROLL DISTRIBUTION - SEE INSTRUCTIONS. It is marked below the windows, at the top of the machine; AMERICAN. It is marked on the bottom: MODEL FOUR (/) NO-43021.
- Compare 1986.0894.01. The American adding machine model 4 was made from September 1917 to May 1922, with serials numbers between 22,000 and 75,200.
- According to donor Homer A. Walkup, this machine was used by his father, also named Homer A. Walkup, when he was a physician in Mt. Hope, West Virginia. Dr. Walkup acquired it in about 1920 for use in a cooperative grocery store intended as an alternative to the coal company’s store. The store lasted only about six to eight months. Formation of the store came at a time of labor trouble in West Virginia, in the era of the Battle of Blair Mountain. Dr. Walkup was enjoined by court order from going on company property, including company-owned housing. He successfully fought the court order and resumed house calls.
- References:
- J. H. McCarthy, The American Digest of Business Machines, Chicago: American Exchange Service, 1924, p. 27, 518. By 1924, American adding machines were made by the American Adding Machine Company of Chicago.
- Accession file.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1920
- maker
- American Can Company
- ID Number
- 1986.0894.01
- accession number
- 1986.0894
- catalog number
- 1986.0894.01
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Adding Machine Section. Comptometer Model J
- Description
- In 1927 officials at Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company of Chicago learned that rival Burroughs Adding Machine Company of Detroit had one of its recent machines on exhibit at the U.S. National Museum (as the Smithsonian’s museum was then called). They offered to supply the museum with an example of their latest adding machine, the Model J Comptometer, and to construct a section of the device for display. The museum accepted the offer, and received both a Comptometer and this model.
- The section has three columns of keys with yellow (two right columns) and green keys. Complementary digits are indicated on the keys. There also is one red key. Two numeral wheels are at the front, and a zeroing crank with wooden handle is on the side. Part of the top is steel, painted brown, and the rest of the casing is glass and allows one to see the mechanism from the sides. The mechanism is metal. A bell rings when the dials are cleared. Four rubber feet are screwed in place.
- For related object, see 309393.
- Reference:
- Accession file.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1928
- maker
- Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company
- ID Number
- MA.309394
- catalog number
- 309394
- accession number
- 98776
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Comptometer Model J
- Description
- In 1927 officials at Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company of Chicago learned that rival Burroughs Adding Machine Company of Detroit had one of its recent machines on exhibit at the U.S. National Museum (as the Smithsonian’s museum was then called). They offered to supply the museum with an example of their latest adding machine, the Model J Comptometer, and to construct a section of the device for display. The museum accepted the offer, and received both this Comptometer and a related model.
- This machine has a brown metal case and eight columns of green and off-white color-coded plastic-covered keys. Odd numbered keys are concave, even numbered keys flat. Complementary digits are indicated on the keys. The first key pressed after the machine has been zeroed rings a bell. There are numbered decimal markers, subtraction levers, and a row of nine windows at the front to indicate the result shown on number wheels below. A zeroing crank is on the right. There is a red key at the back of the keyboard on the right.
- The machine is marked on the front and back of the case: Comptometer. It his serial number marked to the left of the keyboard near the front: J264527. A metal tag behind the keyboard reads in part: TRADE COMPTOMETER MARK. It also is marked with several patent dates. The last is: Nov.2.20.
- For a related object, see 309394.
- Reference:
- Accession file.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1926
- maker
- Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company
- ID Number
- MA.309393
- accession number
- 98776
- maker number
- J264527
- catalog number
- 309393
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Baby Calculator Adder
- Description
- The orange, black, and tan paper box contains a black and gold-colored metal instrument, instructions on pink paper, and a metal stylus. The device has seven columns for addition.
- The Baby Calculator was a handheld adder manufactured by the Calculator Machine Company of Chicago from at least 1925 into the 1940s. The Tavella Sales Company of New York City distributed this example. According to the box, it sold for $2.50 in the United States and $3.00 in Canada and other foreign countries. It has hooks at the top of each column for carrying in addition, but none at the bottom to assist in borrowing in subtraction.
- References:
- Typewriter Topics (March 1925), 59:76.
- Popular Mechanics (January, 1935), p. 128A; vol. 73 (March, 1940), p. 143A; vol. 83 (February, 1945), p. 192. A new design was introduced in 1945. See Popular Mechanics, April, 1945, p. 202.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1925
- distributor
- Tavella Sales Company
- maker
- Calculator Machine Company
- ID Number
- MA.155183.27
- catalog number
- 155183.27
- accession number
- 155183
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Dietzgen 932S Excello Dotting Instrument
- Description
- This 2-1/4" German silver and steel metal drawing instrument consists of a teardrop-shaped plate to which is attached a mechanism that is supposed to hold a larger serrated wheel and a smaller pattern wheel. The mechanism links the wheels to a bar that holds a pen point. When the larger wheel is rolled along the edge of a T-square or straight edge, the pen point bounces up and down to make a dotted line that formed part of an engineering drawing.
- The larger wheel (5/8" diameter) is marked with one of the trademarks for the Eugene Dietzgen Co., the superimposed letters E and D inside a circle formed by the letters C and o. The six smaller wheels (9/16" diameter) also have this trademark and are numbered from 1 to 6, representing six possible dotting patterns. All the wheels are made of brass. The instrument also has the trademark and is marked: EXCELLO. The arm holding the pen point is marked: DIETZGEN (/) GERMANY. The instrument is in a rectangular wooden bar-lock case covered with black leather and lined with green velvet. The top of the case is marked: DIETZGEN (/) “EXCELLO”. The top is also marked: GERMANY.
- This dotting instrument was advertised as model 932S in the 1926 Dietzgen catalog and sold for $5.15. It was part of the Excello product line, Dietzgen's second-highest level of drawing instruments. This object was used in the physics department at Kenyon College. Compare to 1987.0788.02.
- Reference: Catalog of Eugene Dietzgen Co., 12th ed. (Chicago, 1926), 57–59, 84.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1926
- distributor
- Eugene Dietzgen Company
- ID Number
- 1982.0147.01
- accession number
- 1982.0147
- catalog number
- 1982.0147.01
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
The Portable Adding Machine
- Description
- This manual adding machine has seven columns of nine plastic keys each, and a steel case painted black. There is a repeat/error lever on the left, and total/subtotal, non-add and non-print keys on the right. Numbers are set by pressing keys, and entered by turning a handle on the right side of the machine. The printing mechanism, black ribbon, and paper tape are at the back. The machine prints seven-digit totals. It has four rubber feet.
- The machine is marked on the top: The (/) Portable. It is marked on the front: PORTABLE ADDING MACHINE CO. (/) CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, U.S.A. It is marked on a piece of paper pasted to the bottom: Guarantee (/) The Portable Adding Machine is fully guaranteed (/) against defective material and workmanship for (/) a period of one year from date of sale. (/) PORTABLE ADDING MACHINE CO. (/) B.E.Harris (/) President.
- It was designed by Glenn J. Barrett, manufactured by the Corona Typewriter Company of Groton, New York, and sold by the Portable Adding Machine Company of Chicago. It was introduced in October 1924 and cost $65.00. By 1928, this machine was sold as the Corona by the Corona Typewriter Company.
- Compare 2000.0221.01.
- References:
- E. Martin, The Calculating Machines (Die Rechenmaschinen), trans. P. A. Kidwell and M. R. Williams, Cambridge: MIT Press, 1992, p. 333.
- J. H. McCarthy, The American Digest of Business Machines, Chicago: American Exchange Service, 1924, p. 52.
- Business Machines and Equipment Digest,Chicago: Equipment Research Corporation, 1928, sec 3-2, p. 4.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1925
- distributor
- Portable Adding Machine Company
- maker
- Portable Adding Machine Company
- ID Number
- MA.323608
- accession number
- 250163
- catalog number
- 323608
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Mercedes-Euklid Model 12 Calculating Machine
- Description
- This full-keyboard electric proportional rod calculating machine has an iron and steel frame painted black and 13 columns of round plastic keys. At the bottom of each column of keys is a red key that zeros the digit in that column. The keyboard is painted green. Numbers entered on the keys appear in a row of windows under the keyboard that shows 13 number dials.
- At the front of the machine is a row of 16 windows showing the result, a row of eight windows showing the dials of the revolution counter, and another row of 16 dials that may be used to accumulate totals. Small finger knobs are in front of these dials. These three rows of dials are on a movable carriage. Movable decimal markers are above all four rows of dials. The motor for the machine is under the mechanism and behind the carriage. The plug is on the right side.
- A metal tag on the right of the machine reads: COXHEAD (/) MERCEDES. A metal tag next to the dials of the revolution counter reads: RALPH C. COXHEAD (/) MERCEDES-EUKLID (/) CALCULATING MACHINE (/)] NEW YORK CHICAGO. A mark scratched in the base at the front reads: Property [/] Univ. Mich. A mark at the left front of the machine, on the frame for the carriage, reads: 9[. . .].
- Ralph C. Coxhead was the American agent for the Mercedes-Euklid in the 1920s. A Mercedes-Euklid model 12 with this capacity sold for $875.00 in 1928.
- References:
- E. Martin, The Calculating Machines (Die Rechenmaschinen), trans. P. A. Kidwell and M. R. Williams, Cambridge: MIT Press, 1992, pp. 156–164.
- J. H. McCarthy, The Business Machines and Equipment Digest, 1928, vol. 1, sec. 9, pp. 24–28.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1920s
- distributor
- Coxhead, Ralph C.
- maker
- Mercedes-Bureau-Maschinen-Gesellschaft
- ID Number
- MA.324279
- accession number
- 256654
- catalog number
- 324279
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Psychological Test, Diagnostic Chart For Fundamental Processes In Arithmetic
- Description
- Guy T. Buswell and Lenore John published this chart in about 1925 through the Public School Publishing Company of Bloomington, Illinois. The entire package included directions, a pupil's work sheet, a teacher's diagnostic chart, and a pupil's work sheet diagnostic chart. This is the pupil's work sheet. It lists problems in addition, subtraction, multiplication and division.
- For further information about the test and its authors, see 1990.0034.168.
- At the time of the publication, Buswell was in the Department of Education at the University of Chicago and John was at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. Buswell and John hoped that their chart would be used to determine the areas of arithmetic in which a student required further work. It served as a “diagnosis” of problems rather than a “prognosis” of future achievement. In later years, Buswell and John collaborated on a series of arithmetic textbooks.
- This example of the test is from the personal collection of U. S. government psychologist and university teacher in education Samuel Kavruck.
- For a related object see 1990.0034.164.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1925
- maker
- John, Lenore
- Buswell, G. T.
- ID Number
- 1990.0034.007
- accession number
- 1990.0034
- catalog number
- 1990.0034.007
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Dietzgen 736B Bow Compass with Pencil Point
- Description
- This steel and German silver instrument has a needle point on one leg and a holder for a pencil lead on the other. The handle has vertical ridges above a single line of raised metal dots. The width of the compass is adjusted with a pin through the legs and a wheel around the pin between the legs. Additional thumbscrews allow adjusting of the needle and pencil points. The instrument appears to be a Federal Bow Pencil, model number 736B, advertised in 1926 by the Eugene Dietzgen Company of Chicago.
- Reference: Catalog of Eugene Dietzgen Co., 12th ed. (Chicago, 1926), 60, 74.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- ca 1926
- maker
- Eugene Dietzgen Company
- ID Number
- 1981.0933.21
- accession number
- 1981.0933
- catalog number
- 1981.0933.21
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Sheets, Response to an Inquiry about the Michelson Harmonic Analyzer
- Description
- This letter , written Apriil 7, 1928, is in response to one from Prof. James W. Glover of the University of Michigan requesting information about the Michelson harmonic analyzer.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1928
- maker
- Gaertner, William
- ID Number
- 1987.0705.06
- accession number
- 1987.0705
- catalog number
- 1987.0705.06
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
-
Psychological Test, General Intelligence, Operations of Arithmetic and Silent Reading
- Description
- This collection of tests for students in grades six, seven and eight is an early example of a paper and pencil standardized examination for school children. Included (printed to be read going one direction) are seven tests collectively designed to measure general intelligence. They include multiple choice tests of analogies, arithmetic word problems, vocabulary, matching symbols to numerals (called substitution), verbal ingenuity, arithmetical ingenuity, and synonyms and antonyms. A test of silent reading ability and seven tests of operations of arithmetic are printed to be read going in the other direction.
- These tests were developed at the Bureau of Educational Research at the University of Illinois by Walter S. Monroe and B. R. Buckingham. They were published by The Public School Publishing Company of Bloomington, Illinois, and also are known as the Illinois Examination. This version is copyrighted 1920.
- This example of the test is from the collection of clinical psychologist David Shakow.
- The test is glued to an orange piece of cardboard.
- Reference:
- Edward H. Cameron, Psychology and the School, New York: Century Company, 1921, pp. 317–334.
- Location
- Currently not on view
- date made
- 1920
- maker
- Buckingham, B. R.
- Monroe, Walter Scott
- ID Number
- MA.316371.045
- catalog number
- 316371.045
- accession number
- 316371
- Data Source
- National Museum of American History
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