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Wales Model 10 Series Adding Machine

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Adder Machine Company
Description
This full keyboard manually operated printing adding machine has a metal frame painted black, with glass sides and front, and a glass panel in front of the number dials. There are nine columns of plastic keys, with the keys colored according to the place value of the digit represented by the column. The keyboard is covered with green felt. To the left of the keyboard is total key, above the number keys are red plastic repeat and error keys, and behind the numeral dials are non-print and non-add keys. These nine dials are behind the keyboard, with divisions for U.S. currency indicated.
The metal crank for operating the machine is on the right. At the back of the machine is the printing mechanism and a 13-inch (33 cm.) movable carriage. The machine is extremely heavy. The case must be removed to replace the ribbon.
The machine is marked on the front: WALES. It is marked above the keyboard: WALES (/) Visible (/) Adding (/) and Listing (/) Machine (/) THE ADDER MACHINE COMPANY (/) WILKES-BARRE, PA.,U.S.A.. It is marked on a list of 17 patents on the back of the machine with the first patent date: DEC. 1. 1903. The last patent date given there is: NOV. 23. 1909.
The Wales adding machine is based on patents of the inventor Charles Wales, a native of Maryland who had a long career as an inventor of adding machines. He first applied for an adding machine patent in 1902 as a resident of Detroit. By 1903, he was assigning his patents to the Adder Machine Company. That company moved manufacture from Detroit to Pennsylvania in 1906. From the first, Wales was interested in designing machines in which the results of computations were visible to the operator (this was not true on Burroughs adding machines of the time). Wales adding machines featured visible printing of results. Wales soon left the company that bore his name to work for Burroughs, and patented a visible printing mechanism used in their machines. He later designed the Federal adding machine, which was manufactured by the Colt Fire Arms Manufacturing Company of Hartford.
This Wales adding machine is from the collection of Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company, a rival firm of Wales.
Reference:
J. H. McCarthy, The American Digest of Business Machines, Chicago: American Exchange Service, 1924, pp. 544-545.
Location
Currently not on view
Credit Line
Gift of Victor Comptometer Corporation
1910
ID Number
MA.323593
accession number
250163
catalog number
323593
Object Name
adding machine
Physical Description
plastic (overall material)
rubber (overall material)
glass (overall material)
metal (overall material)
felt (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 27 cm x 42 cm x 58 cm; 10 5/8 in x 16 17/32 in x 22 27/32 in
place made
United States: Pennsylvania, Wilkes-Barre
See more items in
Medicine and Science: Mathematics
Adding Machines
Science & Mathematics
National Museum of American History
Subject
Mathematics
Record ID
nmah_690617
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a5-0d36-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

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Adding Machine, Wales Model 10 Series.
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