Oliver Typewriter Company

This article is about the typewriter manufacturer. For the tractor manufacturer, see Oliver Farm Equipment Company.
The Oliver Typewriter Company
Privately held company
Industry Typewriter manufacturing
Fate Dissolved
Successor British Oliver Typewriter Company
Founded 1895 (1895)
Founder Thomas Oliver
Defunct 1926 (1926)
Headquarters Chicago, Illinois, United States
Area served
United States
Key people
Products See Typewriters section
Number of employees
875
Footnotes / references
[1]

The Oliver Typewriter Company was an American typewriter manufacturer headquartered in Chicago, Illinois. The Oliver Typewriter was the first effective "visible print" typewriter, meaning text was visible to the typist as it was entered.[2] It was however preceded by the Daugherty typewriter, which was also an effective visible typewriter.[3] Oliver typewriters were marketed heavily for home use, utilizing local distributors and sales on credit. Oliver produced more than one million machines between 1895 and 1928 and licensed its designs to several international firms.

Competitive pressure and financial troubles resulted in the company's liquidation in 1928. The company’s assets were purchased by investors who formed The British Oliver Typewriter Company, which manufactured and licensed the machines until its own closure in the late 1950s. The last Oliver typewriter was produced in 1959.

History

Thomas Oliver

Thomas Oliver

Thomas Oliver was born in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada, on August 1, 1852. Having become interested in religion, Oliver moved to Monticello, Iowa, after the death of his mother, to serve as a Methodist minister. In 1888, Oliver began to develop his first typewriter,[4] made from strips of tin cans, as a means of producing more legible sermons.[5] He was awarded his first typewriter patent, US Patent No. 450,107, on April 7, 1891.[6] After four years of development, a "crude working model" composed of 500 parts had been produced.[4] Oliver resigned his ministry and moved to Epworth, Iowa, where he found investors willing to provide $15,000 ($427,000 in 2016) of capital, and leased a building in which to manufacture his machines.

While visiting Chicago to promote the machine, Oliver encountered businessman Delavan Smith, who became interested in the typewriter and bought the stock held by the Iowa investors. Oliver was given a 65% interest in the company and retained to continue development of the typewriter, at an annual salary of $3,000[7] ($85,000 per year in 2016). Oliver died suddenly of heart disease on February 9, 1909, aged 56.[8]

Illinois years

The Oliver Typewriter Company had begun operating in 1895, with its headquarters on the ninth floor of a building on the corner of Clark and Randolph Street in Chicago. In 1896, manufacturing moved from Iowa to Woodstock, Illinois, when the City of Woodstock donated a vacant factory once used by the Wheeler and Tappan Company on the condition that the Oliver Typewriter Company remain there at least five years.[9] Manufacturing was divided into six departments: type bar, carriage, assembly, tabulators and adjustment, inspection, and an aligning room.[10] The company's headquarters moved to the Oliver Building, now a Chicago landmark on the National Register of Historic Places, when it was completed in 1907.[11]

Company ornamentation on the Oliver Building

Starting in 1899, the company established sales networks by encouraging customers to become local distributors. This method of marketing relied on word of mouth and emphasized sales made directly to neighbors (door-to-door) and, after 1905, sales on credit. In response to increased competition in the late 1910s, however, the company eliminated its network of local salesman and used the resulting savings in commissions to reduce the typewriter's $100 ($1,400 in 2016) price by half.[12] Sales increased and, at its peak, the company's labor force of 875 was producing 375 machines daily.[5]

In addition to its offices in Illinois, the company had branch offices in Baltimore, Buffalo, Cleveland, Kansas City, Minneapolis, New York City, Omaha, St. Louis, San Francisco and Seattle, all of which closed when Oliver shifted to mail order sales in March 1917. A minor recession in 192122 caused a large number of customers to default on their payments, resulting in the repossession of their typewriters. The company opted not to borrow money and, in 1926, the board of directors voted to liquidate the company. Only one employee, Chester Nelson, was retained to oversee the company's liquidation.[5]

British Oliver Typewriter Company

In 1928, the Oliver Typewriter Company was sold to investors who formed the British Oliver Typewriter Company in Croydon, England.[5] Production of Oliver’s original, three-rowed keyboard design was discontinued in 1931 when the company began to produce a rebranded model of the "Fortuna" typewriter, a four-rowed German design. In 1935, the company began to produce the Halda-Norden standard typewriter, another licensed design, as model No. 20. The company, however, had to retool its machines and return to the original Oliver design when the British government placed large orders for the three-rowed No. 15 at the outbreak of World War II.[13]

Production of the No. 20 resumed around 1947, at which time the company began to license the Oliver name to several European manufacturing companies.[14] The standard desktop machine was eventually discontinued in favor of portable models; the company began to sell a German design, the Siemag Standard, as the Oliver standard. In 1958, Oliver purchased the Byron Typewriter Company, previously the Barlock Typewriter Company, of Nottingham. The licensing ventures were ultimately unsuccessful, and the company's machine tools were transferred to a factory in Germany.[13] Production of all Oliver typewriters ended in May 1959.[15]

Typewriters

Design

An Oliver model No.9

The general design of Oliver typewriters remained mostly unchanged throughout the company's history.[12] The Olivers are "down strike" typewriters, meaning the typebars strike the platen (also known as the roller) from above, rather than from below ("up strike") or from the front ("front strike"). Unlike the "up strike" method, which prints text out of sight on the underside of the platen, the "down strike" is a "visible print" design, meaning the full page is visible to the typist as the text is being entered. The relatively greater striking power of the "down strike" design led Olivers to be preferred for specialty uses such as stencil cutting or "manifolding" (copying using carbon paper).[16] The "front strike" method, a competing "visible print" design, was patented around the same time (188991), but an effective machine that did not interfere with the typist’s line of sight was not available until 1897 when, roughly three years after the introduction of the Oliver No. 1, the Underwood No. 1 appeared on the market.[17]

The Oliver’s typebars are bent in a bow (forming an inverted "U" shape) and rest in "towers" on the sides of the typewriter. This design limited the machine to a three-row QWERTY keyboard as the typebars were stacked such that they grew progressively larger as more were added. The size and usability implications of adding additional keys and thus, more typebars, precluded the addition of a fourth keyboard row dedicated to numbers.[17] Although a four-row prototype was designed in 1922, it was shelved due to the company’s financial troubles at that time.[5] The No. 20, No. 21 and portable models produced by the British Oliver Typewriter Company had four-row keyboards.

Color

Oliver typewriters were finished with olive green paint or nickel-plating and white or black keyboards, depending on customer preference. Beginning with model No. 3, machines were painted green except some variants to be exported to warm or damp regions, which were chrome-plated.[18] The color was changed from green to black on the introduction of model No. 11.[12] Oliver typewriters made for the British war effort were supplied with a "war finish".[13]

Models

United States

United States models were manufactured in the company's factory in Woodstock, Illinois.

The following models were produced in the United States between 1894 and 1928:[12]

Model Years Produced Number Produced Notes
No. 1 18941896 5,000 First model; completely nickel-plated; closed "O" in "Oliver" on name plates
No. 1½ 1896 Unknown Unofficial designation;[12] No. 2 with nickel plating and closed "O"
No. 2 18961901 30,000 Improved paper feed; added handles; open "O" (see logo)
Nos. 3/4 19021907 148,000 Larger size; color ribbon
Nos. 5/6 19071914 311,000 Oliver name plates removed from sides; backspacer added
Nos. 7/8 19141915 57,000 Left margin release moved to right of keyboard
Nos. 9/10 19151922 449,000 Right and left shift keys; two-color ribbon
Nos. 11/12 19221928 35,000 Last model produced in the United States; handles removed; black color

With the exception of model No. 2, even-numbered models were produced with extra keys (32 versus 28 keys) for sale in countries with accented languages.

United Kingdom

The following models were produced by the British Oliver Typewriter Company between 1930 and 1942:[12][13]

Model Years Produced Number Produced Notes
No. 11 19281931 Unknown Stock obtained from American firm and those produced by British Oliver
Nos. 15/16 19281947 > 34,346
No. 20 19351950 > 88,600 Rebranded Halda-Norden standard typewriter
No. 21 19491959 33,129 Enclosed typebar "well"
Portable 19301959 > 83,500 Various portable models produced as Types 15

International

Oliver typewriter designs were licensed for production in several countries. Variants of model No. 3 were produced by The Linotype Company of Montreal and A. Greger & Co. of Vienna.[19][20] Models produced by licensees were marketed under various names including "Courier" (Austria), "Fiver" (Germany),[14] "Stolzenberg" (continental Europe) and "Revilo" (Argentina).[16] The Argentinian licensee used Revilo, Oliver backwards, to avoid royalty payments on the Oliver name, which had already been registered in Argentina.[21]

References

  1. Brockman, Paul (April 9, 1999). "Delavan Smith Papers, 1868-1921". Indiana Historical Society. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  2. Taylor, Carol (November 1999). "Looking into our Past". Daily Camera Librarian. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  3. Template:Cite Polt, Richard (2015) Countryman Press "The Typewriter Revolution"
  4. 1 2 Pitman, Isaac (1899). Pitman's Journal of Commercial Education. Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd., p. 707
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Rehr, Darryl (February 1989). "The Unknown Oliver" (PDF). ETCetera Magazine of the Early Typewriter Collectors Association. pp. 1, 4–5. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  6. "United States Patent: 0450107". United States Patent and Trademark Office. Retrieved 2007-12-28.
  7. Rehr, Darryl (May 1989). "More on Reverend Oliver ..." (PDF). ETCetera Magazine of the Early Typewriter Collectors Association. pp. 8–9. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  8. "Thomas Oliver" (PDF). The New York Times. 1909-02-10. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  9. Baker, Nancy L. (2006). Woodstock. Arcadia Publishing. p. 33. ISBN 0-7385-4080-3.
  10. Hoke, Donald. "Product Design and Cost Considerations: Clock, Watch, and Typewriter Manufacturing in the 19th century" (PDF). Outagamie Museum. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  11. "Chicago Landmarks". City of Chicago Department of Planning and Development, Landmarks Division. Archived from the original on 2009-06-30. Retrieved 2007-12-20.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rehr, Darryl (December 1992). "The Beginner's Oliver" (PDF). ETCetera Magazine of the Early Typewriter Collectors Association. pp. 10–11. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Beeching, Wilfred A. (1974). Century of the Typewriter. St. Martin's Press. pp. 206–208.
  14. 1 2 Adler, Michael H. (1973). The Writing Machine. George Allen & Unwin Ltd. p. 322. ISBN 0-04-652004-X.
  15. Davis, Will. "Oliver portables and relatives". geocities.com/wbd641. Archived from the original on 2009-10-22. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  16. 1 2 Mares, George Carl (1985). The History of the Typewriter: Successor to the Pen. Post-Era Books. pp. 114, 171. ISBN 0-911160-87-6.
  17. 1 2 Campbell-Kelly, Martin (December 2005). "The User-friendly Typewriter". The Rutherford Journal. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
  18. Lewis, John (December 1995). "Not Your Ordinary Oliver" (PDF). ETCetera Magazine of the Early Typewriter Collectors Association. p. 3. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  19. Decker, Don (July 1988). "Oddest of Olivers?" (PDF). ETCetera Magazine of the Early Typewriter Collectors Association. p. 1. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  20. Frey, E. (1926). Luegers Lexikon der gesamten Technik und ihrer Hilfswissenschaften (in German). Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt. p. 117.
  21. Hammerton, John Alexander (1915). The Real Argentine: Notes and Impressions of a Year in the Argentine and Uruguay. Dodd, Mead and Company. pp. 228–229.
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