PART 221
We all know about his first - here is Christopher Latham Sholes's last typewriter patent. It was issued to him on this day (December 31) in 1889. Six weeks later, on February 17, 1890, he was dead.
Sholes applied for the patent on July 16, 1887, at a time when he had long since severed all relations with James Densmore and the Remingtons and any he might have had with Wyckoff, Seamans and Benedict.
Sholes designed this one last machine while he read Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward: 2000-1887, which depicted the utopian America of the year 2000.
This science fiction novel is, according to Erich Fromm, "one of the 
most remarkable books ever published in America". It was the third-largest 
bestseller of its time, after Uncle Tom's Cabin and Ben-Hur: A Tale of the 
Christ. It influenced a large number of intellectuals, and appears by title 
in many of the major Marxist writings of the day. "It is one of the few books 
ever published that created almost immediately on its appearance a political 
mass movement," Fromm wrote. In the United States alone, 162 "Bellamy Clubs" sprang 
up to discuss and propagate the book's ideas. Owing to its commitment to the 
nationalisation of private property, this political movement came to be known as 
Nationalism, not to be confused with the political concept of nationalism. The novel also inspired several utopian communities.
What did Sholes envisage for his last typewriter? Did he design it while looking forward, believing in a utopian future?
"My invention relates to type-writing machines, and belongs to that class of 
such machines wherein the type are all set in motion at once to bring the 
desired character to the printing-point where said character is impacted by a 
suitable mechanism to produce an impression, this style of machine being 
contradistinct to those having the type carried singly or in pairs on separate 
levers that are independently actuated to produce the above result. My invention 
has special reference to simplifying, cheapening and reducing the size and 
weight of the machine without in any way impairing the scope of its work or the 
speed and efficiency of its action. To do this, I dispense entirely with 
keyboards composed of separate and numerous key-levers, a single lever on the 
right and another on the left serving every purpose of the manifold lever system, 
and said single levers, unlike those employed where there are but one or two in 
a machine, having no side motion of any kind, but do their work by a single 
downward impact, thus affording all the advantage of the separate key without 
its complication, size, or expense.
"In carrying out my invention I employ a peculiar system of stop-rods, 
operated by a distinct application of the fingers, that actuates either one of 
the aforesaid levers, and, the-proper stop being touched, the right letter will 
be held at the printing-point to be struck by the impacting mechanism."





2 comments:
Looks almost like a Rube Goldberg contraption. Then in a way don't all manual typewriter mechanisms?
I need to look for that book. I enjoy the way the folks from way back envisioned the late 1900s and 2000 or so, especially those written in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
I hope the fires stay away from you.
Wow, this is a radical idea.
I read Looking Backward years ago -- fairly crude propaganda, as I recall.
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