Article 22220 of comp.dcom.telecom:

Jim Haynes 

Subject: History of Teletypewriter Development

Date: 17 Nov 91 08:34:46 GMT

Organization: University of California, Santa Cruz

Here's another one (and that exhausts my supply). These two came into

my hands as Monographs when I was working for Teletype in 1963-1966.

The main reason I typed them in is to get them into the telecom

archive since they contain information that isn't readily available so

far as I know.





              HISTORY OF TELETYPEWRITER DEVELOPMENT



                         R. A. Nelson



                     K. M. Lovitt, Editor





October 1963                                    Teletype Corporation

                                                5555 West Touhy Avenue

                                                Skokie, Illinois



                        ------



                      ABSTRACT



  The success of the modern teletypewriter began with Howard L. Krum's

conception of the start-stop method of synchronization for permutation code

telegraph systems.  The purpose of this paper is to provide a brief historical

account of events which led to that achievement and of those which ensued.



  Four areas of development will be covered:



  (1) The contributions of Sterling Morton, Charles L. Krum and

      Howard L. Krum.

  (2) The contributions of E. E. Kleinschmidt.

  (3) The contributions of AT&T and Western Electric.

  (4) The contributions of L. M. Potts



                        -----



     _HISTORY OF TELETYPEWRITER DEVELOPMENT_



  Area I. In 1902 a young electrical engineer named Frank Pearne solicited

financial support from Joy Morton, head of the Morton Salt interests.  Pearne

had been experimenting with a printing telegraph system and needed sponsorship

to continue his work.  Morton discussed the matter with his friend, Charles L.

Krum, a distinguished mechanical engineer and vice president of the Western

Cold Storage Company (which was operated by Joy's brother, Mark Morton).  The

verdict for Pearne was favorable, and he was given laboratory space in the

attic of the Western Cold Storage Company.



  After about a year of unsuccessful experimenting, Pearne lost interest and

decided to enter the teaching field.  Charles Krum continued the work and by

1906 had developed a promising model.  In that year his son, Howard, a newly

graduated electrical engineer, plunged into the work alongside his father.

The fruit of these early efforts was a typebar page printer (Patent No.

888,335; filed August 22, 1903; issued May 19, 1908) and a typewheel printing

telegraph machine (Patent No. 862,402; filed August 6, 1904; issued August 6,

1907).  Neither of these machines used a permutation code.



  They experimented with transmitters as well, applications filed in 1904 and

1906 maturing into Patents No. 929,602 and No. 929,603.  These patents covered

modes of transmission which depended both on alternation of polarity and

change in current level.



  By 1908 the Krums were able to test an experimental printer on an actual

telegraph line.  The typing portion of this machine was a modified Oliver

typewriter mounted on a desk with the necessary relays, contacts, magnets, and

interconnecting wires (Patent No. 1,137,146; filed February 4, 1909; issued

April 27, 1915).  As a result of the successful test of this printer, Charles

and Howard Krum continued their experiments with a view to developing a direct

keyboard typewheel printer.



  They sought most of all to discover a way of synchronizing transmitting and

receiving units so that they would stay "in step."  It was Howard Krum who

worked out the start-stop method of synchronization (Patent No. 1,286,351;

filed May 31, 1910; issued December 3, 1918).  This achievement, which more

than anything else put printing telegraphy on a practical basis, was first

embodied (for commercial purposes) in the "Green Code" Printer, a typewheel

page printer (Patent No. 1,232,045; filed November 28, 1909;issued July 3,

1917).



  The transmitters first used by the Krums were of the continuously-

moving-tape variety.  (A stepped tape feed, they maintained, would have

reduced transmission speed.)  In order to permit sequential sensing, the rows

of code holes were arranged in a slightly oblique pattern (with respect to

tape edges).  This method of transmission is more fully elaborated in Krum

Patents No. 1,326,456, No. 1,360,231, and No. 1,366,812.



  Keyboard-controlled cam-type start-stop permutation code transmitters were

developed by Charles and Howard Krum in about 1919.  Such a device is the

transmitter component of the Morkrum 11-Type tape printer (Krum Patent No.

1,635,486).  This kind of transmitter employs a single contact to open or

close the signal line.



  In about 1924 the Morkrum Company introduced the No. 12-Type tape printer

(H. L. Krum Patent No. 1,665,594).  On December 23, 1924, Howard Krum and

Sterling Morton (son of Joy Morton) filed an application on the 14-Type

type-bar tape printer which matured into Patent No. 1,745,633.  [1]



  Area II.  It appears that the early efforts of E. E. Kleinschmidt were

directed toward development of facsimile printing apparatus and automatic

Morse code equipment.  He patented first a Morse keyboard transmitter (Patent

No. 964,372; filed February 7, 1095; issued January 11, 1910) and later a

Morse keyboard perforator (Patents No. 1,045,855, No. 1,085,984, and No.

1,085,985).  (The latter became known as the Wheatstone Perforator.)



  In 1916 Kleinschmidt filed an application for a type-bar page printer

(Patent No. 1,448,750 issued March 20, 1923).  This printer utilized Baudot

code but was not start-stop.  It was intended for use on multiplex circuits,

and its printing was controlled from a local segment on a receiving

distributor of the sunflower type.  Later, around 1919, Kleinschmidt appeared

to be concerned chiefly with development of multiplex transmitters for use

with this printer (Kleinschmidt Patent No. 1,460,357).



  It seems that Kleinschmidt first became interested in modern start-stop

permutation code telegraph systems when H. L. Krum's basic start-stop patent

was issued in December 1918.  Shortly after that Kleinschmidt filed an

application entitled "Method of and Apparatus for Operating Printing

Telegraphs" (Patent No. 1,463,136; filed May 1, 1919; issued July 24, 1923).

The system described therein employed the start-stop principle with a modified

version of his earlier multiplex distributor.  That patent, accordingly, was

dominated by the Krum start-stop patent.  The conflict of patent rights

between the Morkrum Company and the Kleinschmidt Electric Company eventually

led to a merger of the two interests.



  Shortly after the new Morkrum-Kleinschmidt Corporation (later called the

Teletype Corporation) had been established, Sterling Morton, Howard Krum, and

E. E. Kleinschmidt filed an application covering the commercial form of the

well-known 15-Type page printer (Patent No. 1,9904,164).  [2]



  Area III.  Teletype entered the Bell System in 1930.  From this point on,

advances in the Teletype product can be considered the result of the pooled

efforts of the AT&T Company, the Western Electric Company, and the Teletype

Corporation.  Teletype Corporation, of course, holder of the basic patents and

expert in the art, was the chief contributor.



  Although it appears from the report of R. E. Pierce, dated December 24,

1934, that the Bell System was active in the development of telegraph printers

and transmitters as early as the year 1909, a review of the patents issued to

Bell reveals no significant contribution to modern teletypewriter development

(using start-stop permutation code) until the introduction in 1920 of the 10-A

teletypewriter (Pfannenstiehl Patents No. 1,374,606, No. 1,399,933, No.

1,426,768, No. 1,623,809, and No. 1,661,012).



  The 10-A teletypewriter was the first embodiment of such basic design

features of the 15-Type printer as stationary platen, moving type basket, and

selector vane assembly, but the majority of improvements incorporated in the

15-Type were proprietary to the Teletype Corporation.



  Area IV.  The earliest contribution of Dr. L. M. Potts to the start-stop

method of synchronization appears to have been set forth in a patent

application filed November 18, 1911, covering a reed-type start-stop selector

(Patent No. 1,151,216).



  In 1914, Dr. Potts filed an application for a single magnet page printer

which used an eight-unit code (Patent No. 1,229,202; issued June 5, 1917).



  In 1915, Dr. Potts filed an application covering another single magnet page

printer, this one using the start-stop permutation code (Patent No. 1,370,669;

assigned to AT&T March 8, 1921).



  Potts Patents No. 1,517,381 and No. 1,570,923 were also assigned to AT&T.