One has to hand it to
indefatigable Imperial typewriter collector Richard Amery, of Sydney. He’s nothing
if not persistent in his relentless quest to find out what became of his
beloved typewriter company. “The truth is out there,” I can hear him cry. He still
believes there are questions to be answered. “What became of the … names Royal,
Adler, Imperial as far as branded portable manual typewriters from 1979 on?”
Richard asked in a comment on my last post. I thought that had been adequately
answered somewhere in the last three posts, but maybe not.
Well, just as Fox Mulder found there are some unspeakably
ugly creatures “out there”, I’m afraid the awful reality about Imperial is
similarly none too pretty. Richard is one of those few good men, but can he
handle the heartbreaking truth? Which is that no manual typewriter was made in
the Imperial name after Litton Industries sold the brand to Volkswagen in 1979,
and none after VW sold it to Olivetti in 1986. Tragically, it’s that
simple. Imperial manual typewriters were dead and gone by 1979.
One
of the main reasons for this is that as part of the Litton-VW deal, Volkswagen
acquired an 11 per cent holding in a British company called Office and
Electronic Machines, which had already been given British and Irish
distribution rights to Adler and Triumph typewriters by Litton in 1973. VW
obviously foresaw limited use of the Imperial nameplate (as it also did with
the individual Triumph nameplate) and had decided to put its faith almost
exclusively in the TA brand name and logo, including in Britain, Canada and
Australia. In Australia, where the company became known as Adler Business
Machines Pty Ltd, TA even advertised on the back of VW’s reputation for car
manufacturing. So VW, already burdened with manual typewriters at a time when
they were starting to be phased out, was more than happy to hand the Imperial
nameplate to OEM.
Imperial's Hull factory in 1971.
OEM,
incorporated in 1950, took over the business of the Imperial Typewriter Company
on March 1, 1975, a week after Litton had closed the last Imperial factory, on
Hedon Road in Hull. OEM changed Imperial’s name to Imperial Business Equipment,
headquartered in Leicester, though interestingly it continued to incorporate
the British royal warrant in its British advertising.
The Observer, October 28, 1979
(The Royal Typewriter
Company, meanwhile, became Royal Business Machines Inc, based in the US under a
parent company, Triumph-Adler North America. In the mid-1980s RBM became part of a
joint venture between TA and Konishiroku Photo Industry Co of Japan, makers of
Konica cameras, photocopiers, fax machines and laser printers.)
Trouble at mill in Hull followed strike action in Leicester in 1974.
OEM’s
existing position as an importer and distributor of Adler and Triumph
typewriters in Britain caused considerable angst during the industrial dispute
which followed the closure of Imperial’s Hull factory. Laid off workers wanted
to continue making Imperial typewriters themselves, but ran into the problem of
distribution. A statement from the workers asked, “If the factories [Hull
and Leicester] are to be viable, a distribution mechanism must be found which
can market their product. At the moment, Litton thinks that it can pull out of
producing machines in Britain and yet retain the absolute right to market in
the United Kingdom the typewriters which they manufacture abroad.
“Office and Electronic Machines, a British
company, is presently expected to market Triumph-Adler machines,
manufactured by Litton's German subsidiary … the union is now seeking to
arouse public concern about this matter. One solution, it might be thought,
could be to nationalise OEM. Alternatively, OEM could be pressed, on balance of
payments grounds, to agree to become the representatives of the new Hull-Leicester
workers' enterprises. Whatever the solution which is finally agreed,
however, it is clearly quite improper for a trans-national company [Litton] to
abandon its productive obligations to a country, and at the same time expect to
exploit that country's markets unhampered in any way.”
Once the idea of a workers’ typewriter factory
had died its natural death, one ton (yep, 907 kilograms, no
less) of Imperial Typewriter Company files were purchased by Peter Tytell, left, son
of “Mr Typewriter, New York” Martin Tytell and himself a forensic typewritten
document expert. The Imperial files were shipped back to the Tytell Typewriter
Company’s second-floor office-laboratory-warehouse-workshop on 116 Fulton
Street, Lower Manhattan, near the Trump Building on Wall Street.
Martin Tytell
Peter
Tytell’s purchase was one of the few times in the period between 1979 and 1986
that Triumph-Adler or Volkswagen had anything to show for VW’s initial $26
million investment in Litton’s typewriter division. Put bluntly, the whole
exercise was a total disaster. In 1986 a Reuters story in the San Francisco Examiner estimated the
total of losses suffered by TA was $750 million in a crippling seven-year
period. The Examiner quoted analysts
as saying “TA might never have become truly profitable while it remained with
VW”. Yet as the parent company, VW had to bear that overall cost, while the market
failure was down to Triumph-Adler. OEM’s losses from whatever loyalty it had to the
Imperial brand name paled by comparison, but in the end OEM had to abandon its
Imperial typewriters in 1986, and never truly recovered. After three
appointments of voluntary liquidators in seven years, OEM finally bit the dust
in January this year.
The Guardian, October 11, 1975
The Guardian, September 26, 1979
At
the time of the Litton-VW deal being announced, it was said that Triumph-Adler
would “continue to operate with complete independence”. VW added that TA’s
“activities will continue unchanged and fully independent”. Which meant that TA
could deal with OEM on its own accord, including allowing OEM to use the
Imperial nameplate and royal warrant. It should be noted that both Imperial and
Royal were wholly-owned subsidiaries of TA, therefore TA could make decisions
for the two brands without VW’s involvement.
The Imperial SE 5000 CD
OEM continued to use the Imperial brand name for another
seven years. The last typewriter sold as an Imperial was a beast called the SE
5000 CD. It was a copycat golfball machine marketed in Britain and Australia in
1979 by Imperial Business Equipment Ltd.
The SE 5000 CD was also being labelled by manufacturers Triumphwerke
Nuremberg GMBH as a Royal. It was already being made at the time Litton sold a
controlling 55 per cent interest in its typewriter division to Volkswagen, on March
9, 1979 (authorised by the West German Government, June 12). It was sold in Australia by Raitt Adams, a company headed by George Raitt
which merged Imperial’s dealers in Sydney, Adelaide and Perth.
The Royal SE 5000 CD
About
seven years ago, someone in Dunshaughlin, County Meath, was selling one of
these Imperial SE 5000 CDs for 100 euros. It came with a “Pipman Wamsley” (sic)
commercial typewriter handbook, a cover, a mat and a cleaning brush. Not sure
if the enticing package is still available, but the cost of freight to Sydney
would be enormous. Still, Dunshaughlin (or more specifically, the townland of
Lagore) is famous for an ancient crannóg from the 7th century, where a number
of Irish antiquities were discovered. Maybe one day in the far distant future
cultural archaeologists will find the SE 5000 CD there, too.
OEM
used Imperial and Adler typewriters when in 1986 it developed the Screentyper, the
first office word-processing system that integrated “user-friendly” typewriters
with screen data processing, with optional telex and electronic mail handling.
The system was based on a Z80A microprocessor with 64K of memory and run by
OEM's own developed operating system. This was the last time the nameplate
“Imperial” appeared on new typewriters. In 1988 the Screentyper turned into
the TA VS 20 Videoscript system and TA’s “ultimate electronic typewriter” was
the SE 525 with expandable memory.
The Guardian, June 6, 1986
It
has to be accepted, regardless of our present-day feelings on the subject, that
in 1979 both Litton and VW were far, far more interested in the growing market
of electric and electronic typewriters than they were in continuing to make
manual typewriters. This was especially so as part of the development toward small
business and home computers (remembering the Commodore 64 didn’t come out until
1982, and went on to sell in the tens of millions). Before taking a majority
holding in Triumph-Adler, VW had been turned down in a takeover bid for Nixdorf
Computer AG, West Germany’s biggest computer marker and the fourth largest in
Europe (founder Heinz Nixdorf had worked for Remington Rand). VW’s TA
undertaking was, pointedly, described as “almost a second thought”.
The Guardian, January 22, 1980
United
States newspapers reported in March 1980 that VW had embarked on an “aggressive
diversification program to hedge fluctuations in car sales. Its objective is to
become a major force in the fast-growing office automation market – and
ultimately in the electronic office of the future. To meet this objective, VW
already has spent more than one-third of a billion dollars on acquisitions.”
These
included first Triumph-Adler as well as in October 1979 outbidding, to the tune
of $120 million, Dutch concern NV Philips for Pertec Computer, a producer of
small computer systems which led the world in computer-aided design and
manufacturing automation systems. VW was also eyeing companies with expertise
in digital communications.
Pertec
originally designed and manufactured peripherals such as floppy drives, tape
drives, instrumentation control and other hardware for computers. Its most
successful products were hard disk drives and tape drives, which were sold as
OEM to computer manufacturers, including IBM, Siemens and DEC. Pertec bought MITS,
the manufacturers of the MITS Altair computer, for $6.5 million in 1976 and
became involved in the manufacturing of microprocessor-based computers. It released the MITS 300 in 1977, a system which allowed for the Teletypewriter.
Pertec's final in-house computer design, the MC68000-based Series 3200, was extremely
advanced for the time. Soon after Triumph-Adler’s takeover, TA marketed the
system in Europe under its own brand with the model name MSX 3200.
In
1980 TA added Amdahl’s Eugene R. White to its board – Amdahl was an IT company
which specialised in IBM mainframe-compatible computer products. White joined
Pertec’s Ryal R. Poppa, left, who in 1981 was succeeded by Robert R. Nagy, president
of Royal Business Machines, who became head of Pertec as well as Royal, and CEO
of TA North America. Nagy was replaced by Edward E. Hale in 1984, with John E.
Stuart becoming president of Royal.
By
1981 VW had lifted its stake in TA from an original 55 per cent to 98.4 per
cent. And it was very much ruing having done so. TA, which had net earnings of
$10.9 million in 1979, lost $47.5 million in 1980. Naturally, when VW reported in
October 1981 a $12.5 million second quarter loss, its first loss since 1975, it
largely blamed TA. VW financial director Friedrich Thomée, taking the heat of
harsh criticism for his stewardship as policy board chairman of TA, resigned in
December. To make matters worse, Rank Xerox had decided to join the electronic
typewriter market in November (3M added itself to the field in 1982). TA was
certainly in trouble, and had closed its Frankfurt plant and laid off 2800
workers in September 1981.
TA's small 4% slice of the action: The Baltimore Sun, May 4, 1983
Things
didn’t improve in 1983, when losses of $11 to $13 million were still expected
by TA, albeit these were a two-thirds reduction from 1982. On top of this a
prolonged nation-wide cross-industry strike in West Germany in May halted TA
production.
Note the VW Beetle plate name: The Sydney Morning Herald, April 23, 1986
Judging
by its determination to hold on to TA North America, the United States was
possibly the one remaining bright spot for TA when Olivetti bought VW’s 98.4
per cent holding in the West German outfit in April 1986 (VW got a 5 per cent
stake in Olivetti in exchange). Worldwide in 1985 TA had sales of almost $1
billion yet still lost $60 million. TA North America had already sold Royal
Business Machines to Konishiroku Photo Industry Co in January 1986 (Konishiroku
took a 34 per cent stake in 1984) and Royal was renamed Konica Business
Machines USA.
Hartford Courant, January 20, 1985
But in the Olivetti takeover, VW initially held on to TA North
America (which owned Triumph-Adler-Royal Business Machines) and Pertec. The
fact that Olivetti spent $68 million on 98.4 per cent of TA while it cost VW
$280 million for 5 per cent of Olivetti says it all, really. And perhaps
Reuters was right – with TA in its stable, Olivetti announced in May 1987 that
its profit rose 12 per cent to $274.6 million. Yet a year later Olivetti’s
profit fell sharply because of losses at TA, with earnings falling 29 per cent.
In 1990 the Olivetti Computer Group cut its worldwide staff by 7000, including
4000 in Italy, citing weak demand for its product.
The Age, Melbourne, March 16, 1987
On
June 30, 1994, John Alexander Teong, secretary of Imperial Typewriter Sales Pty
Ltd in Sydney, declared the company dissolved. It hadn’t been doing any
business for more than a decade.
The Sydney Morning Herald, June 10, 1989
1992
1981