The Curator who is a Typewriter Collector's
When Rowan Henderson first contacted me about staging a
typewriter exhibition at the Canberra Museum and Gallery, she readily admitted
she knew very little about typewriters.
That was at the end of November last year. In the intervening seven
and a half months, Rowan has developed a considerable interest in typewriters,
and knowledge of their history.
After all, at least for the past five and a half months, she has
been dealing with them – and me! – on an almost daily basis.
Rowan, a curator of social history at the museum, would have
been readily forgiven for allowing herself some respite from typewriter talk
when seven weeks ago she took a break from work to visit her parents on
Queensland’s Gold Coast.
But no! Rowan remembered that her parents still had the
typewriters which had belonged to her grandfather and her great-grandmother.
Sure enough, these beautiful old machines were dug out, dusted
off, and in the case of her grandfather’s 1937 Imperial Good Companion, the
machine was brought back to Canberra for some servicing from me.
So impressed was I with Rowan’s growing interest in typewriters,
I presented her, as a way of saying thanks for all the brilliant work she has put into
this exhibition, with a Remington 5.
The family believe Rowan’s great-grandmother probably bought the
little Underwood 3 when she was in the US working with the League of Nations.
An article on Rowan’s great-grandmother, Isabella Leitch, appeared
in the International Journal of Epidemiology, written by John Pemberton, who
had first worked with Isabella at the Rowett Research Institute in Aberdeen,
Scotland, in September 1937.
“Isabella Leitch was a remarkable woman,” the article opens.
“Isabella Leitch had spent the 1914–18 war carrying
out research in genetics and plant physiology at Copenhagen
University with Professor August Krogh, a Nobel Prize winner in medicine,
and she had obtained her DSc at Aberdeen University in 1919 on the
basis of published and unpublished papers.
“In spite of the fact that she was, by then, an experienced
research worker, she was unable to find a research post in Aberdeen. At
length, in 1923, she found a job as temporary librarian at the Rowett
Research Institute.
“She soon found herself involved in various research
programmes, first in animal nutrition and later, when the Institute
became involved in human nutrition, in that area too. Her
encyclopaedic knowledge and sharp critical mind made her a key figure
and she became adviser and personal assistant to the director,
John Boyd Orr.
“In the 1930s, the signs of specific nutritional diseases
such as scurvy, rickets and pellagra were well known, but there was
little agreement on the early symptoms and signs of malnutrition. Certain
changes in the skin, anaemia, defective night vision, increased frequency
of infections and slower rates of growth were suspected to be signs of
malnutrition and we looked for these.
“Angus Thomson and I often consulted Dr Leitch (as we
always called her), and she was able to give us valuable advice
on what was worth looking for and measuring in the children we were
going to examine. One such piece of advice she gave us, which has turned
out to be very significant, was to measure leg length as well as total
height ...
“Although I occasionally experienced her severe criticism,
as when she returned the draft of an article I was proposing to send
to The Lancet blue pencilled
all over, I remember her with respect and affection. She was one of those
scientists whose honesty, knowledge, high standards and willingness to
help the less experienced workers, enhance the reputation of an
entire research institution.”
You find a story around every corner. This is why I love your blog.
ReplyDeleteThose two typewriters look like they are brand new. Very nice work. The story is very interesting. I do not know where you find all the information. Keep up the great work and best of success with the exhibition.
ReplyDeleteVery nice to have a new convert to typewriters.
This is a great story indeed, thanks.
ReplyDeleteThe exhibit is so exciting, really wish I could fly to Australia right now. All best, Robert.
Good for Rowan, and good for you. That Good Companion looks immaculate!
ReplyDeleteThe IGC looks fantastic, thanks so much Robert! :)
ReplyDeleteAberdeen? As in Aberdeen, Maryland? Nice. I live so very close to there, and I believe I drove through there this past weekend...on the way back from picking up my Imperial Good Companion, nonetheless. Rowan's GC is so amazingly beautiful. I hope to own one of these older models sometime soon. It's great to hear that her family's typewriters will live on through her.
ReplyDeleteOh Ken. Definitely not Maryland. Aberdeen, Scotland! Thanks for your lovely comments.
ReplyDeleteInteresting post as always. You always manage to find a good back story
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ReplyDeleteOh...I heard Aberdeen and instantly thought Maryland. Not sure why, all things considered, but it seemed like a large coincidence, what with the IGC and all. You have a very nice typewriter there, Rowan. Put it to good use!
ReplyDelete5700I've recently got hold of a imperial The Good Companion typewriter and the serial number is AR453. The interesting thing is that it has a Blue Star Line Southampton label on it. I'm wondering how old this actually is and where I can find more info.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Andyd
Hi recently just got hold of a Imperial The Good Comapnion Typewriter serial number A453. It has a Blue Star Line Southampton label on the base of the case. I'm wondering how old this and where I can find out more about it.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Andyd
Very end of 1936
ReplyDeleteThanks Robert, is that quite an early one then? Andyd
ReplyDelete