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Brown & Sharpe Draftsman's Protractor

National Museum of American History

Object Details

inventor
Darling, Samuel
Darling, Brown & Sharpe
Description
In the late 19th century, American draftsmen experimented with different designs for making protractors more versatile. For instance, the secretive machinist Samuel Darling, who operated a separate partnership with Joseph R. Brown and Lucian Sharpe of Providence, R.I., between 1866 and 1892, patented a "bevel and protractor" on July 19, 1887. This was a nearly circular protractor with an extended arm that slid along and rotated around a ruler.
Alton J. Shaw, who apprenticed in the main firm of Brown & Sharpe, came up with a design that was less cumbersome than Darling's. Although Shaw filed for a patent one month before Darling did, Shaw's patent was not granted until August 2, 1887. His protractor consisted of a circle with an extending arm, cut from sheet steel, which fit on a groove within a three-sided square, also cut from sheet steel. An advantage of this protractor was its reversibility. Shaw assigned his patent to Darling, Brown, & Sharpe on August 19 in exchange for $75. The firm marketed the protractor for $6.50, or for $7.75 with a case. In its catalogs, Brown & Sharpe adopted the British spelling, "draughtsmen's".
This instrument is an example of Shaw's design. The protractor is divided by single degrees and marked by fives from 0 to 90 in the clockwise direction. Thirty more unnumbered divisions extend past the 90° mark. A vernier on the frame allows angles to be measured to one minute of arc. The interior of the protractor is marked: Darling, Brown & Sharpe. (/) Providence. R.I. (/) Pat. Aug. 2. 1887. The protractor is in a wood and morocco leather case that is lined with purple velvet. The case has broken apart into at least three pieces. A worn instruction sheet (ID number MA.336072.1.1), dated August 1889, is stored with the object. The instructions indicate that a guiding lever, which was placed in two of the eleven holes at the top of the protracting circle, is missing from the object.
Shaw later moved to Milwaukee, Wis., and then to Muskegon, Mich., where he established the Shaw Electric Crane Company. The company became Lift-Tech International in 1986. The Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co. absorbed Darling, Brown & Sharpe in 1892. After over a century as one of the largest American machining firms, Brown & Sharpe ceased manufacturing machine tools and drawing instruments in 1991. The firm now manufactures optical measuring instruments as a subsidiary of Hexagon Metrology.
This protractor was owned by the renowned American designer of steam engines, Erasmus Darwin Leavitt Jr. (1836–1916), and donated by his granddaughter, Margaret van D. Rice.
See also ID number 1990.0317.02.
References: Oscar James Beale, Practical Treatise on Gearing (Providence, R.I.: Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co., 1886), 73-75; Samuel Darling, "Bevel and Protractor" (U.S. Patent 366,651 issued July 19, 1887); Alton J. Shaw, "Protractor" (U.S. Patent 367,673 issued August 2, 1887); Amy Ackerberg-Hastings, "The Brown & Sharpe Draftsmen's Protractor," Rittenhouse 15, no. 1 (2001): 31–38; Henry Dexter Sharpe, A Measure of Perfection: The History of Brown & Sharpe (North Kingston, R.I.: Brown & Sharpe, 1949), http://www.roseantiquetools.com/id44.html.
Location
Currently not on view
Credit Line
Gift of Margaret van D. Rice
1889-1892
patent date
1887
ID Number
1977.0460.01
accession number
1977.0460
catalog number
336072
Object Name
protractor
Physical Description
velvet (overall material)
morocco leather (overall material)
sheet steel (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 2 cm x 27.2 cm x 17 cm; 25/32 in x 10 23/32 in x 6 11/16 in
See more items in
Medicine and Science: Mathematics
Science & Mathematics
Protractors
National Museum of American History
Subject
Mathematics
Protractor
Drafting, Engineering
Record ID
nmah_904345
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a7-2a39-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Related Content

  • Protractors

    American History Museum
Draftsman's Protractor by Darling, Brown & Sharpe
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