Kinds of Typewriters
Kinds of Typewriters
The concept of a typewriter dates back at least to 1714, when Englishman Henry Mill filed a
vaguely-worded patent for "an artificial machine or method for the impressing or transcribing of
letters singly or progressively one after another." But the first typewriter proven to have worked
was built by the Italian Pellegrino Turri in 1808 for his blind friend Countess Carolina Fantoni da
Fivizzono (as established by Michael Adler in his excellent 1973 book The Writing Machine);
unfortunately, we do not know what the machine looked like, but we do have specimens of
letters written by the Countess on it.
Numerous inventors in Europe and the U.S. worked on typewriters in the 19th century, but
successful commercial production began only with the "writing ball" of Danish pastor Malling
Hansen (1870). This well-engineered device looked rather like a pincushion. Nietzsche's mother
and sister once gave him one for Christmas. He hated it.
Much more influential, in the long run, was the Sholes & Glidden
Type Writer, which began production in late 1873 and appeared on
the American market in 1874.
The Sholes & Glidden had limited success, but its successor, the Remington, soon became a
dominant presence in the industry.
The Sholes & Glidden, like many early typewriters, is an understroke or "blind" writer: the
typebars are arranged in a circular basket under the platen (the printing surface) and type on the
bottom of the platen. This means that the typist (confusingly called a "typewriter" herself in the
early days) has to lift up the carriage to see her work. Another example of an understroke typebar
machine is the Caligraph of 1880, the second typewriter to appear on the American market.