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Thursday 30 June 2011

On This Day in Typewriter History (XLI)

JUNE 30
The Nemcovsky Portable
In the June 2005 edition of ETCetera (No 70), Will Davis, in his then regular Portables, Etc column on various matters concerning portable typewriter development, wrote about a 1924 patented design by one Louis A.Nemcovsky, of New York.

Will took the story through to 1928. And since, to that time,  Nemcovsky patents for this particular machine had either been non-assigned or assigned to the Sun Typewriter Company, Will speculated that Sun was planning to use the Nemcovsky design for an entry into the fiercely competitive portable market, to challenge Corona, Underwood, Remington and Royal.
As Will (below) pointed out, when Lee Spear Burridge’s Sun Standard No 2 came out in 1901, it was promoted as “the only standard typewriter suitable for travellers”. At that time, the Sun’s major rival for this claim was the Blickensderfer.
But by the early 1920s, Corona, Underwood and Remington had created a vast new portable market with much more compact and lighter machines, and were prospering from enormous sales figures. Will wondered whether Sun - which since Lee’s death in 1915 had been run by his brother, Francis Ogden Burridge - was eyeing off this market with Nemcovsky’s revolutionary design in mind.
The truth is, however, that Nemcovsky hawked his design around various manufacturers between 1922 and 1934, and none of them went ahead with a typewriter on which the ribbon spools were placed on the sides (an idea Will didn’t think would work very well). Among others Nemcovsky approached were Underwood and Peerless.
There had been a Peerless standard typewriter between 1891-95, but whether this same company survived to 1934 on the basis of one model seems highly unlikely. It’s possible a new Peerless company had been formed.
Will, in his 2005 ETCetera article, also speculated about whether aspects of the Nemcovsky design, as they related to a fast typebar action, might have been incorporated into John Henry Barr’s own portables in the late 1920s (compare with drawing below).
Where Will was clearly right is that Nemcovsky was trying to sell to any taker a machine he believed to be markedly superior to the Corona 3, Underwood 3 and Remington. In his specifications, he was obviously taking aim at what he considered the failings of all three. He offered up his own design as one which had greater compactness and lightness, without folding devices of any kind, and yet which sacrificed none of the salient features of these models.







Nemcovsky said, “Portable typewriting machines equipped with keyboards departing from standard [that is, ones using three-bank keyboards with two shift devices], are difficult to operate by typists ordinarily trained to operate on standard keyboards, while portable typewriters designed to be collapsed for enclosing into the box and set up for use may be lacking in the durability of non-collapsible typewriters and are more likely to become out of order.
“It is an object of my invention to provide a portable typewriter having a standard keyboard of usual dimensions, which typewriter shall be light in weight, non-collapsible and correspondingly durable in construction and of small exterior dimensions, so that it can be enclosed in normal operative condition within a small case.”
Nemcovsky said his typewriter would be “particularly compact … to confine the outside dimensions of the machine within minimum proportions”.
Given Nemcovsky’s patent attorney for his designs was none other than our old friend Burnham Coos Stickney, there must be a strong suspicion of some collusion between Sun and Underwood. Perhaps the two had joined forces to tackle the early portable market dominance of Corona. As far back as 1908, Nemcovsky had assigned a typewriter design to BOTH Sun and Underwood. Will Davis might well have been unaware when he wrote his article that before his death, Lee Burridge (below), while still running his own Sun company, was also regularly designing typewriters and typewriter components for Underwood. Indeed, Burridge himself designed the Underwood 3.
It was on this day in 1931 that Nemcovsky's design assigned to Underwood was issued:
Nemcovsky, who also patented a code writing machine and a calculating machine, an eye testing device and movable eyes for dolls, took out eight typewriter patents. This is a run-down of the eight:
August 5, 1924 – Non-assigned
September 18, 1928 – to Sun
October 16, 1928 – to Sun (frame, top image)
June 30, 1930 – to Sun
September 23, 1930 (Canada) – to Sun and Underwood
June 30, 1931 – to Underwood
August 7, 1934 – to Peerless
On this day in 1953, the first Chevrolet Corvette rolled off the assembly line in Flint, Michigan. Now, I know this is a very tenuous connection, but in 1998 the Indianapolis 500 pace car was a Chevrolet Corvette driven by Parnelli Jones.
And this is Alan Seaver’s Parnelli Jones Monarch portable in Parnelli’s more customary orange-and-black Ford Mustang racing colours.
It can be seen on Alan’s wonderful Machines of Loving Grace website at http://machinesoflovinggrace.com/rems.htm
On this day last year, someone paid £310 ($US512) for this lime green Olivetti Valentine at an auction at Bonham’s in London. The item came up under the heading, “20th Century Decorative Arts”. Of course, the auction house claimed it was an Ettore Sottsass design. I wonder if, one year later, the buyer has yet realised he or she was duped.

Wednesday 29 June 2011

On This Day in Typewriter History (XL)

JUNE 29
Bennett + Mignon + Joystick = Omega!
A Fallow Fields Typewriter Manufacturing Company production?
("Where sleeping giants lie")
Let me apologise in advance. I do seem to be devoting an inordinate amount of time, energy and space to designs of typewriters which very few of us, if any, ever get to use, let alone see (that is, if they were ever made, even as a prototype).
(BACK TO THE FUTURE ... NOT AGAIN!)
But I have to confess I find most of them irresistible. I am very much taken by notagain’s idea of a Fallow Fields Typewriter Manufacturing Company. It appeals to my imagination. As Richard Polt put it earlier this month, “I like notagain's concept of resurrecting stillborn inventions through 21st-century technology!” notagain had wondered whether 3D printing technology could be used to prototype some of these old patents.
Here’s one we could definitely start with. It’s only about the size of a Bennett (or Junior) and works like a small Mignon. And it would be called the Omega – the very last word in typewriters, the ultimate limit!
Herbert Schönfelder, of Leipzig in eastern Germany, was issued with a patent for the Omega on this day in 1937. He assigned it to Edgar Hoffmann, also of Leipzig.
This is how it worked: The buttons on the bottom left (52-53) are the capitals and figures shift keys, as with a three-bank keyboard typewriter. The button on the bottom right (46) is a back spacer. The small ridge (6) on a frame on the central guide rod (5) is moved by the joystick to line up with the required letter or figure shown on the scale (numbered 57-58). Once aligned, you push down the stick, which lifts the frame on to the typewheel, which then presses against the ribbon and the paper on to the platen. Simple!
Schönfelder suggested “the main parts of the machine, especially the base plate, the parts of the frame and the roof-like covering, are made from artificial materials, such as artificial resin, that can be formed by pressing. To further reduce weight and noise, other parts, like the typeframe, the adjusting gear, the carriage locking gear and the ribbon rolls with the transport toothing may be produced as pressed or cast pieces from artificial materials.”
So who’s willing to invest in notagain’s Fallow Fields Typewriter Manufactory Company? This thing could be a winner. Imagine a 1937-designed cross between a Bennett and a Mignon, made of an organic high-molecular compound (brass coloured?) and marketed in 2011. How could it not succeed?
STOP PRESS: Thanks to Richard Polt, we now know this machine was made after all. It was called the Carissima (I like Omega better). Paul Robert added it to his Virtual Typewriter Museum almost 10 years ago (http://www.typewritermuseum.org/collection/index.php3?machine=carissima&cat=il), and also mentioned it in his The Typewriter Sketchbook (2007). It was made in Leipzig, too, by Knaur-Hübel and Denk, in 1934. Paul says it was "promoted in Germany as 'an achievement of German genius' ... made of bakelite (described in the brochure as 'insulation steel') ... [It] is regarded as relatively rare." These are images of the Carissima from Paul's website:
TYPEWRITER MUSIC
On this day in 1908, Leroy Anderson (above), composer of the popular 1950 instrumental The Typewriter, was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Anderson composed short, light concert pieces, many of which were introduced by the Boston Pops Orchestra under the direction of Arthur Fiedler.
When performing The Typewriter, Fiedler would don a green eyeshade, roll up his sleeves, and mime working on an old typewriter while the orchestra played.
Anderson died, aged 66, at Woodbury, Connecticut, on May 18, 1975.
So, on this day, let’s hear it for Leroy!
Below is small selection of amusing links to The Typewriter:
The original Jerry Lewis version
A later Jerry Lewis version
A 78rpm played on a Garrard 4HF
Martin Breinschmid with Strauß Festival Orchestra Vienna
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2LJ1i7222c&feature=related
Brass Band Berlin (skip the first two minutes of chat, it’s worth it – and what’s that red typewriter?)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jH3zZP2R9os&feature=related
On this day in 1929, the Italian journalist, author and political interviewer Oriana Fallaci (below) was born in Florence. A partisan during World War II, she had a long and successful journalistic career. She died in Florence on September 15, 2006, aged 77.

Take a Tour of a Typewriter Factory (1956)

Imperial Typewriter Company
 Leicester, North Midlands, England
Special guest: Richard Amery
(This article appeared in Meccano Magazine, February 1956)