Blickensderfer
Blickensderfer
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The Blickensderfer typewriter was invented by George C. Blickensderfer around 1893[1], and won fame at the World's Columbian Exhibition of the same year, where the light and portable machines kept up with much heavier typewriters like the Hammond and Caligraph. Hailed as the "5-Pound Secretary" and widely acknowledged as one of the first truly portable typewriters to exist, the Blickensderfer pioneered a sector of the typewriter industry.
The Blickensderfer model 5 and subsequent models used a type element -- a vulcanized-rubber head with what was essentially stamps on its outside faces-- to print.
No instances of the Blickensderfer models 1 thru 4 are known to exist. They were longer, elaborately-shelled typewriters that supposedly used a similar typeball mechanism to the 5.
For more information on your machine, please select a specific model below:
- Blickensderfer Nos. 1-4
- Blickensderfer No. 5
- Blickensderfer No. 6
- Blickensderfer No. 7
- Blickensderfer No. 8
- Blickensderfer No. 9
- Blickensderfer Electric
- Rem-Blick
Notes
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- ↑ G.Fudacz, Blickensderfer Typewritershttps://www.antikeychop.com/blickensderfer-typewriters