Was the typewriter born on a farm in LeRoy, Dodge County, Wisconsin - population 1121 (July 2009) - and not 48 miles north-west in Milwaukee?
Should this town sign ...
... be saying something like this?:
Could it be that the typewriter was first made in such a quaint rural setting as this ...
... and not this?:
The claim was first made in 1895, 22 years after the typewriter emerged, in this book:
Asa D.Barnes repeated his claims 14 years later, in 1909, when he wrote to Typewriter Topics:
Samuel Willard Soulé was born in Pompey, Onondaga, New York, on January 25, 1830
to Elisha Soulé and Clarissa Higgins Willard. Soulé died on July 12, 1875, in Brooklyn, New York, just one year after the first Sholes & Glidden typewriters left the E.Remington & Sons factory in Ilion, New York.
THE
TRUTH
IS
told in Richard Nelson Current's
The Typewriter and The Men Who Made It (1954)
*From Commemorative Biographical Record of the Upper Wisconsin Counties:
Waupaca, Portage, Wood, Marathon, Oneida, Vilas, Langlade and Shawano, 1895. ASA D. BARNES, a prominent farmer and
horticulturist of Waupaca county, and proprietor of the Waupaca Arctic Nursery
and Fruit Farms, has an extended acquaintance in Waupaca County. He was born in
Le Roy township, Dodge County, Wisconsin, on September 5, 1852, a son of Horace Barnes, who
was born in Onondaga County, New York, in 1822 ...
Horace Barnes, the oldest son of Alanson Barnes, was married in Onondaga
County, New York [in] about 1846, to Phoebe L. Higgins, daughter of William D. and
Hannah Higgins. Samuel W. Soulé, a nephew of Mrs Barnes, was the original
inventor of the type machine, the plans of which, and the first model, were made
on Horace Barnes' farm in the town of Le Roy, Wisconsin."
Another interesting post. It is amazing how early inventors and inventions clashed. I often wonder if it is the fellow with the best promotion and most money that get the credit for the invention.
ReplyDeleteWhat is they about history being written by the victors? A great bit of digging and a reasonable hypothesis... and more notable names for the pantheon.
ReplyDeleteI personally think that there must have been many inventors of "the first typewriter", but only the Sholes & Glidden design managed to have a lasting relevance because it was the one put on sale commercially through an established manufacturer. The rest, like they say, is history.
ReplyDeleteI can understand why some towns would have loved to be named "birthplace of the typewriter"; it's like today we saw entire towns bickering for the title of "birthplace of the iPad". The truth is, such title could have boosted the local tourist industry and benefit the residents. But I doubt if that recognition would have benefited the so-called "Inventors" or their heirs...
I give Pellegrino Turri credit as the proven first inventor of a typewriter. But the idea was "in the air" throughout the 19th century (and perhaps as far back as Henry Mill's vague 1714 patent).
ReplyDeleteThank you Bill, Rob, Miguel and Richard for your comments.
ReplyDeleteI do hope nobody has read this post as an attempt by me to promote the idea Sholes stole Soulé's idea.I merely set out to poke fun at what was reported in 1909. By "first typewriter", I am of course referring to the "Sholes & Glidden", the first "typewriter" to be called a "Type Writer", a "Type-Writer", a "Typewriter" or a "Type Writing Machine".
An further fact about Samuel Willard Soule. On January 21, 1867 in Woodstock VT, he married Betsy Call Pelton. On the document, he is listed as living in Milwaukee WI and his occupation is 'patent rights'.
ReplyDelete