From essential tool to collector’s item, we explore records about typewriters found in the National Archives Catalog.
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Keys to the Past - Typewriters in the Records of the Federal Government

What was once an everyday necessity for several generations is now a fascinating subject for collectors and history enthusiasts. If you have a fondness for typewriters or a general interest in historical technology, you’ll enjoy this exploration of typewriter records in the National Archives Catalog. 

 

In the federal government, the introduction of  typewritten documents varies widely by agency and even by office, location, resources, and individual circumstances. By the late 1800s, following the introduction of commercially available typewriters,  federal agencies began producing type written records.  

 

Patents and trademarks

Early patents for the typewriter are barely recognizable by modern standards.

Drawing of a Typewriter

 

Drawing of a Typewriter, 6/26/1868, National Archives Identifier 595503

 

This is the 1868 utility patent drawing for a typewriter invented by Christopher L. Sholes, Carlos Glidden, and J. W. Soule.

1600252 - Typewriting Machine - James Smathers [page 11], 9/21/1926, National Archives Identifier 2524981

 

This 1926 patent was submitted as an improvement over previous typewriters. It purports to “require less effort on the part of the operator, and therefore be less fatiguing and one in which the speed of operation is materially greater than on fully hand-operated machines.”

1600252 - Typewriting Machine - James Smathers
22724 - Fold it Up-Take it with You-Typewrite Anywhere - Corona Typewriter Company, Inc.

22724 - Fold it Up-Take it with You-Typewrite Anywhere - Corona Typewriter Company, Inc., National Archives Identifier 98839004

 

The Fold it up and take it with you typewrite anywhere label was submitted for registration to the Patent and Trademark Office.  This label will be used on the packaging of the “typewriting machines.”

War Effort

During wartime, paperwork was a battle unto itself, and typewriters were an important tool. From personnel forms to requisitions to orders, typewriters were employed in the war effort. Typewriters were celebrated as vital and precious equipment, meticulously repaired, and even starlets posed with them.

Office of War Information - War Production Board: Typewriters Slated for War Use. Guide Sheet No. 340,

Office of War Information - War Production Board: Typewriters Slated for War Use. Guide Sheet No. 340, 9/28/1942, National Archives Identifier 271785873

 

This notice explains that 600,000 typewriters are needed to equip the military during World War II.  The public is asked to sell their typewriters (but nothing older than from 1935) to support the war effort.  No portable model needed!

Taking time off between the shooting of scenes at the RKO Studios in Hollywood, Miss [Maureen] O'Hara helped collect more than 70 typewriters for future use by the Army, Navy, and Marines, National Archives Identifier 196469

Taking time off between the shooting of scenes at the RKO Studios in Hollywood, Miss [Maureen] O'Hara helped collect more than 70 typewriters for future use by the Army, Navy, and Marines
Equipment is Precious
Victory Waits On Your Fingers - Keep 'Em Flying Miss U.S.A.

[Left] "Equipment is Precious!", ca. 1941 - 1945, National Archives Identifier 514217; [Right] "Victory Waits On Your Fingers - Keep 'Em Flying Miss U.S.A.", ca. 1941 - 1945, National Archives Identifier 515979

Famous Typewriters

Antique Remington typewriter

Antique Remington typewriter, National Archives Identifier 166706572

 

This typewriter was used by President Theodore Roosevelt at his home in Sagamore Hill, NY.

 

Informal Portrait of Margaret Truman Using a Typewriter, ca. 1947, National Archives Identifier 348546668  

 

First Daughter Margaret Truman, and later author, is captured with a typewriter in 1947.

Informal Portrait of Margaret Truman Using a Typewriter

Guides

Record Group 300: Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training includes a history of the typewriter and a guide for the  Modern Secretary. Giving us an historical glimpse into how the typewriter changed communication and office norms as typing speed became more important than legible handwriting.

A Brief History of the Typewriter

A Brief History of the Typewriter, National Archives Identifier 7280709

From the series, Administrative Subject Files, File Unit: 14-1 Training Secretarial and Clerical Program Training Program Region X Dallas, Texas, this 11 page pamphlet about the history of the typewriter was produced by Remington Rand Corporation. The pamphlet includes a typewriting “family tree.”

The Modern Secretary

The Modern Secretary, National Archives Identifier 7280719

This pamphlet for the modern secretary and her duties was produced by the Royal Typewriter Division of the Royal McBee Corporation.  It includes a two page spread with instructions on how to care for your typewriter.  Remember “DON'T tie your eraser to your typewriter. It can become caught in the working parts of the machine.”

Typewriters as Exhibits

Several times, typewriters were submitted as exhibits in federal court cases.

Photograph of Woodstock Typewriter with Witness Statement

Photograph of Woodstock Typewriter with Witness Statement, 9/29/1949, National Archives Identifier 202288426 from  U.S. v. Alger Hiss.  

 

“I have been shown 7 photographs of typewriters and I have picked out this one as looking like the one I saw in 

the house of Claudie Catlett, 2728 P St NW, Washington DC. It is my understanding that this typewriter was given to her or her sons by Mr. or Mrs. Alger Hiss. I first remember seeing the typewriter 3 or 4 months after we moved into 2728 P St NW. These photographs were shown to me by Special Agents James P. Martin and John J Walsh of the Federal Bureau of Investigation on the above date. I am making this statement of my own free will.”

 

Royal Standard Typewriter, Government Exhibit 120, ca. 1949 - 1950, National Archives Identifier 166126341 from  U.S. v. Judith Coplon (146-1-317)


This typewriter was an exhibit in U.S. v. Judith Coplon, where Coplon was charged with attempting to give "defense information" to Valentin A. Gubitchev, a Russian national employed by the United Nations.

Royal Standard Typewriter, Government Exhibit 120
Exhibits 70-72 Photographs of Tape Recorder and Typewriter

Exhibits 70-72 Photographs of Tape Recorder and Typewriter, National Archives Identifier 7582822

The photograph of this typewriter and tape recorder was an exhibit in the grand jury proceedings pertaining to two missing recorded conversations and an 18 1/2 minute gap in the nine Presidential tape recordings subpoenaed from Richard M. Nixon on August 29, 1973.

Citizen Archivist

Revolutionary War Pension File Mission

Thirteen months into our ambitious transcription and tagging mission, more than 4,000 Citizen Archivists have transcribed more than 80,000 pages!  They have made thousands of pension files of America’s first veterans accessible and searchable.  Citizen Archivists have transcribed fascinating stories of military service and American life. Here are a selection of some of the stories transcribed by volunteers:

Frederick Hain's father was "a true republican, and almost a fanatic in the cause of freedom" and insisted all five of his sons enlist.

 

Peter Sanborn was discharged 300 miles from his home and had to travel home on his own without means to sustain himself.

 

Burt Moore's widow lived until the Civil War and her papers declare she was always loyal to the Union.

 

Vincent Vaughn had no trouble remembering the names of his Captains, because they had a "fracas" and one chopped off the other's hand!

 

According to his widow Rachael, Deputy Apothecary General Henry Collins Flagg was the surgeon who treated General Casimir Pulaski.

 

Philip Carter helped capture four or five hundred Tories while marching through North Carolina mountains.

  • New to the Citizen Archivist program? Learn how to register and get started. Be sure to review our tutorial Get Started Transcribing and join the mission.
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Are you hunting and pecking in your research? Speed up your search with these answers from History Hub:

 

When did the government switch from manuscript to typeset documents?

 

Typewriter Anomalies

 

How was “Victory Mail” transcribed and typed during World War II?

 

How should I transcribe typing errors?

 

Why were sections of these records redacted?

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