The Story of the Typewriter, 1873-1923 by Herkimer County Historical Society

(5 User reviews)   372
English
Ever wondered how that clunky typewriter on your grandma's desk came to be? This book isn't about famous inventors or corporate giants—it's about a small town in upstate New York that accidentally became the epicenter of typewriter history. It's a fascinating, almost forgotten story of how a group of local mechanics, tinkerers, and dreamers in Herkimer County built an industry from scratch, competing with titans and changing how America wrote. If you love stories about underdog communities and the real, messy birth of everyday technology, this is a hidden gem.
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the invention which was Christopher Latham Sholes' gift to the world. John W. Vrooman, President, Herkimer County Historical Society. Herkimer, N. Y., April 7, 1923. CHAPTER I. FIFTY YEARS OLD The manufacture of the first practical writing machines began at Ilion, Herkimer County, New York, in the autumn of 1873. This anniversary year 1923 is a fitting time to review the remarkable history of this great invention, and every phase of the incalculable service which it has rendered to the modern world. Fifty years old! What will be the thoughts of the average reader when he is reminded of the actual age of the writing machine? The typewriter has made itself such an essential factor in modern life, it has become so necessary to all human activities, that the present-day world could hardly be conceived without it. It is hard to name any other article of commerce which has played a more commanding role in the shaping of human destiny. It has freed the world from pen slavery and, in doing so, it has saved a volume of time and labor which is simply incalculable. Its time-saving service has facilitated and rendered possible the enormous growth of modern business. The idea which it embodied has directly inspired many subsequent inventions in the same field, all of which have helped to lighten the burden of the world's numberless tasks. In its broad influence on human society, the typewriter has been equally revolutionary, for it was the writing machine which first opened to women the doors of business life. It has radically changed our modern system of education in many of its most important phases. It has helped to knit the whole world closer together. Its influence has been felt in the shaping of language and even of human thought. The most amazing fact of all is that these stupendous changes are so recent that they belong to our own times. One need not be very old to recollect when the typewriter first began to be a factor in business life. The man in his fifties distinctly remembers it all. There are even some now living who were identified with the first typewriter when its manufacture began fifty years ago in the little Mohawk Valley town of Ilion, New York. Such results, all within so short a period, indicate the speed with which our old world has traveled during the past generation--a striking contrast to the leisurely pace of former ages. The story of the typewriter is really the latest phase of another and greater story--that of writing itself. Anyone, however, who attempted to write this greater story would soon discover that he had undertaken to write the whole history of civilization. The advance of man from primitive savagery to his present stage of efficiency and enlightenment has been a slow process, but each stage of this process through the ages has been marked, as if by milestones, by some improvement in his means and capacity for recording his thoughts in visible and understandable form. The earliest attempts at word picturing by savages, the Cuneiform inscriptions of Babylonia, the hieroglyphics of Ancient Egypt, the clay tablets and stone monuments of antiquity, the papyrus of Egypt, the wax tablets and stylus of the Romans, the parchment manuscripts of the Middle Ages, the development of the art of paper manufacture, the invention of the art of printing, and even the comparatively modern invention of steel pens, are all successive steps in this evolution. Looking back from our vantage ground of today over this record it is easy for us to see the writing machine...

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This isn't your typical history book. The Story of the Typewriter, 1873-1923 zooms in on one specific place: Herkimer County, New York. For fifty years, this rural area was a surprising hotbed for typewriter manufacturing. The book pieces together how it all happened, from the first local tinkerers who saw potential in the new writing machines, to the rise of factories that put towns like Ilion and Herkimer on the map.

The Story

Forget a single narrative. This book is more like a scrapbook assembled by the local historical society. It collects articles, old advertisements, factory photos, and personal recollections. You see how companies like Remington (yes, the gun maker) got into typewriters here, and how smaller firms popped up, tried crazy designs, and sometimes failed spectacularly. It's the grassroots story of the Machine Age, told through payroll records, patent diagrams, and stories of the people who clocked in every day to build these complicated machines.

Why You Should Read It

I loved this because it makes history feel tangible. You're not reading about abstract "industrial progress." You're reading about the specific streets where these factories stood and the actual people who worked there. It connects a global invention—the typewriter—to a very local community. It answers questions you didn't know you had, like "Why were so many typewriters made in the middle of New York state?"

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for anyone who enjoys niche history, the history of technology, or Americana. It's not a slick, dramatic page-turner; it's a thoughtful, detailed look at how innovation actually happens on the ground. If you've ever looked at an old typewriter and wondered about the hands that made it, this book gives those hands a name and a hometown.



🔓 Public Domain Notice

You are viewing a work that belongs to the global public domain. Preserving history for future generations.

Steven Garcia
3 months ago

I’ve read many books on this subject, and the material builds progressively without overwhelming the reader. A perfect companion for a quiet weekend.

Michael Scott
1 month ago

I didn't expect much, but the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. This has earned a permanent place in my collection.

Paul Flores
1 month ago

After hearing about this multiple times, it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. I would gladly recommend this to others.

Michael Sanchez
5 months ago

I went into this with no expectations and it challenges the reader's perspective in the most intellectual way. Well worth recommending.

Emily Mitchell
4 months ago

As part of my coursework, the presentation feesl refined and carefully planned. This book will stay with me for a long time.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (5 User reviews )

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