Nice. I love the square brackets on this Hermes — a key all of my typewriters so far lack. Very useful for inline notes and citations.
I admit I'm also tickled by his working for the "Underground Physics Division"; it probably literally means the physics of explosions beneath the earth's surface, but metaphorically, it could describe the whole lab. My brother-in-law worked for Sandia for most of his career, and he still can't or won't even hint on what he did there. (His doctorate is in shock physics.)
I wish I had the personal history of all my typewriters. I only know something about the origins of one — also a Hermes.
I have a receipt in the case with a Hammond, dated 1924. The receipt was from the Hammond Typewriter Company. I can’t quite make out the date. There is a name at the bottom of the receipt. I hadn’t noticed it before. It was a student. The receipt lists name address and occupation of the buyer and lists the salesman’s name too.
Nice. I love the square brackets on this Hermes — a key all of my typewriters so far lack. Very useful for inline notes and citations.
ReplyDeleteI admit I'm also tickled by his working for the "Underground Physics Division"; it probably literally means the physics of explosions beneath the earth's surface, but metaphorically, it could describe the whole lab. My brother-in-law worked for Sandia for most of his career, and he still can't or won't even hint on what he did there. (His doctorate is in shock physics.)
I wish I had the personal history of all my typewriters. I only know something about the origins of one — also a Hermes.
I have a receipt in the case with a Hammond, dated 1924. The receipt was from the Hammond Typewriter Company. I can’t quite make out the date. There is a name at the bottom of the receipt. I hadn’t noticed it before. It was a student. The receipt lists name address and occupation of the buyer and lists the salesman’s name too.
ReplyDeleteSure is great knowing the history behind a typewriter and knowing the previous owner makes it even more interesting.
ReplyDeleteI'd love a typewriter from Sandia or other famous lab. All I have is an HP-35 (still works great) from Lawrence Livermore.
Beautiful H3k. I find those original versions much better typers than the newer ones.
Happy New Year Joe!