PART 193
Image from Friedrich Müller's Schreibmaschinen und Schriften-Vervielfältigung courtesy of Richard Polt at The Classic Typewriter Page
I've been
wanting to write something about Frederick Myers and his Mercury typewriter for
a few weeks now, and today I get another opportunity to do so.
The last
time I approached the subject I baulked at it because the only decent image of the
Mercury available is on Richard Polt’s The
Classic Typewriter Page, accompanying a story about the Mercury. It can be
found here.
Doing
this “On This Day in Typewriter History” series is a tough enough gig, but I rely heavily for help from my typewriter collecting friends across the globe and if I
didn’t get the generous assistance and encouragement from people like Richard
Polt, Alan Seaver, Will Davis, Peter Weil, Martin Howard, Flavio Mantelli, Paul
Robert, Richard Milton, Georg Sommeregger, Herman Price, Anthony Casillo, Wim
Van Rompuy, Markus Elster, Chuck Dilts, Darryl Rehr, Tom Russo, Adwoa Bagalini
and so many other kind people, it would be absolutely impossible.
Still, I
try very hard not to outstay my welcome and to be more self-reliant for images,
without which these posts would look very dull indeed. So I have outlaid quite
a few dollars to ship in from Germany Friedrich Müller's Schreibmaschinen und Schriften-Vervielfältigung and Ernst Martin's Die Schreibmaschine und ihre Entwicklungsgeschichte,
to give myself a few more options. I might not be able to read the text, but I’ll
have fun looking at the illustrations! Also, new-found access to back issues of
Typewriter Topics will help
enormously, too.
Anyway,
on to the Mercury ...
Frederick
Myers was not, as some typewriter histories would have us believe, an Englishman. At the
time of applying for eight of his nine typewriter patents in 1890-91, he was
based in Liverpool in England but was a United States citizen. He applied for
the ninth in New York.
Myers was
born to Frederick and Judah Myers in Baltimore in 1841. He was a mariner and
first travelled to Liverpool as a boatswain on the Annapolis in 1871. Myers settled in Preston, Lancashire, with his
family and started a grocery store, but in 1874 went bankrupt, owing many
creditors. It took a while for him to work his way out of that setback, but Myers
seems to have had marginally more success with typewriter inventing.
In 1886-87
Myers designed two machines, one with typebars in two semi-circles hanging over
the platen, the keys being attached directly to the bars. The other had a
conventional keyboard (though Myers took the “Q” from the top left to the
bottom right) with a very large typewheel. Myers patented both throughout
Europe and in the US. They were both assigned to the Mercury Type Writing
Machine Company of London.
In 1889 Myers
came up with the machine we know as the Mercury, yet this patent was
unassigned. An improved design for this was patented on this day (December 2)
in 1890 and was also unassigned.
Myers
continued to work on this design yet in 1891 persisted with the large typewheel
idea for Mercury. Eventually he reverted to something like the Mercury typewriter, and to
QWERTY. No sane man would be able to make head nor tail of Myers’ designs, yet
toward the end of the 19th century the Mercury was somehow made and marketed. It
sold for eight guineas, weighed only 8lb and measured 7½ inches square by 4
inches high.
From Mares
Myers
returned to the US in 1894 and for the next 30 years concentrated his inventing
efforts on the like of phonographs and pneumatic tires. During that time he established
both the Myers Manufacturing Company in New York and the Myers Phonograph
Corporation. He also designed for Stylophone.
Thanks for shedding some more light on this invention and its creator. I have faith that someday, a Mercury will come out of some British basement.
ReplyDeleteI will add a link to your page from mine.
Robert, I believe I may have written you in the past, but I’m back with some additional questions on your biographical info on Frederick Myers. If you recall, I believe I could argue that the Frederick Myers who patented the Mercury is the same Frederick Myers who patented the Velicopede in 1869 (sometimes referred to as the first bicycle in the US). This Myers was born in Prussia, but immigrated to NY in the 1850s. He served in the US Civil War as musician ( and repaired watches on the side). He left New York for Europe around 1880 and lived in London for a dozen years as well as Hamburg, Paris, and Austria. He returned around 1915 to NY. Myers applied for numerous US patents while in Europe. I’d love to know more about your Frederick Myers and your sources - to see if we have two Myers inventors or one very prolific creator.
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