| Antique
      Mail Room Equipment | 
   
 
 
Antique Mail Room
Machines  
 
 
"Heap of Papers," Denver, CO,
photograph by Harry M. Rhoads (1880/81-1975) 
Denver Public Library, Western History Collection (00186429) 
This exhibit traces the mechanization of the
office mailroom, which occurred largely between the late1890s and World War I.  The key
developments involved machines that addressed items to be mailed and that
sealed, affixed postage to, and opened envelopes.. 
  
    |   | 
    Photos 
      Click to enlarge | 
   
  
    | Addressing Machines
       
      Addressing machines are used to print names and addresses on newspapers, mailing
      labels, envelopes, form letters, and other items.  The earliest
      addressing machines appear to have been used by publishers of periodicals,
      among others.  These machines
      eventually led to a considerable savings in clerical labor for other companies
      with large mailing lists, such as insurance companies and companies that used direct mail advertising.  
       
      The earliest known patent for an addressing machine was awarded to a
      Canadian, Robert Dick, in 1859. An illustration from the 1859 patent is
      reproduced top right. Patents for improvements on Dick's machine were
      awarded to William H. Clague and Robert B. Randall in 1871, Elias Longley in 1875, and
      Dick in 1875, 1884, and
      1889.  1894, 1899, and 1908 patent dates also appear on this type of
      machine. This patent history indicates that this type of machine was marketed for at least
      50 years.  The second photo to the
      right shows a machine based on the 1875 Longley patent that was made by
      the Mather M'F'G. Co., Philadelphia. 
       
      According to the 1859 Dick patent, a user of his addressing machine was
      expected to use a printing press to print columns of names and addresses
      on sheets of paper.  In 1861, the Michigan Farmer reported
      that "We have procured one of the celebrated Dick's Addressing
      Machines in order to facilitate mailing the Farmer.  By it,
      accuracy, as well as dispatch, is secured. Putting in type over two
      thousand names to be used in this machine has delayed the issue of the Farmer,
      but we feel confident that our readers will bear with us a little, while
      making these important improvements."  (Michigan Farmer,
      Oct. 5, 1861)   The individual columns of names and addresses
      were then cut apart and glued together end to end to form a roll.  The roll was
      put on a spool in the back end of the addressing machine (the end to the
      left in the first image in the column to the right).  The
      paper was fed through a number of rollers, which moved the paper through a
      tank containing liquid adhesive, and then to a cutter at the front of the
      machine.  The machine was placed on a stack of envelops, newspapers,
      or other items to be addressed.  When the first name and address came
      out of the machine, it was cut off the roll and at the same time pressed
      onto the top envelope.  That envelope was removed, and the process
      continued.  The patent claimed that two people with one machine could
      address 4,000 items per hour.  Dick proposed that the same technology
      could be used to produce account statements that could be attached to
      cards and mailed.   
       
      An article in the Circular in 1867 describes an addressing machine
      used by the Circular.  The machine was manufactured by C. M.
      and S. Peck, New Haven, CT, under patents issued to Wright and Peck and H.
      Moeser. According to the article, "The writing involved in mailing of
      even less than 2000 papers sent weekly from the office of the Circular
      was, a few months since, no easy task.  Now a person sits down to a
      machine and, in a small proportion of the time it formerly took to write
      the names and post-office directions, makes sport of printing
      them   It may interest some who have never seen the operation to
      learn more particularly how it is performed. The machine is furnished with
      a small case of steel matrices or dies, resembling common type, excepting
      that the letter on the die is sunk into the metal.  The name of each
      subscriber is 'set up' with the matrices in a composing-stick, and is
      transferred to a wooden block by means of a small lever-press, which with
      a single stroke leaves all the letters of the same standing in relief upon
      the end of the block.  The address blocks are placed upon
      galleys.  The galleys when filled and locked up are ready to be inked
      and passed through the gallery-race of the addressing machine.  A
      galley is pushed forward in the race until the first name is seen through
      the aperture in the shield plates, where it is firmly held by a
      friction-brake.  The newspaper to be directed is laid over the
      opening between the shields, when the operator, by pressing with his foot
      on the treadle, brings a small platen down upon the paper, [and] forces it
      upon the inked block below.  The return movement of the treadle
      brings forward another name. Of course, after all the address-blocks are
      once made, they may be used for a long period.  Other
      addressing-machines have been invented which involve no transfer of the
      names to wooden blocks, but depend upon standing type." (Circular,
      June 17, 1867) 
      
      A number of other addressing machines were patented during the 1870s and 1880s,
      including ones by McFatrich (1870), Darling (1873), Edison (1877), Belknap
      (1877), and
      Dennis and York. Leffingwell (1926) reports that "a patent was issued to
      James McFatrich, of Lena, Illinois, on October 4, 1870, for a machine
      called the 'McFatrich Mailer' which was, so far as is known, the first
      addressing machine. [Evidently, Leffingwell was not aware of the Dick
      machines.] Securing a license from the inventor, the Shniedewend
      & Lee Company, of Chicago, manufactured the mailer during the full
      term of the patent, beginning in 1880. This company was succeeded by the
      Challenge Machinery Company, in 1893.  The name was changed to the
      Mercantile Addressing Machine Company.  McFatrich was not alone in
      this pioneering, for in 1877 Frank D. Belknap, of Wooster, Ohio, made an
      attempt to get away from hand addressing. He wrote the names and addresses
      on a sheet of parchment paper with an electrically operated pen and
      obtained additional addresses by passing an inked roller over several
      sheets of parchment containing the master addresses, the envelope or
      matter to be addressed being placed under the sheet. When the typewriter
      came into commercial use, parchment paper, instead of being used in long
      strips as in the earlier models, was cut into individual pieces and pasted
      to a cardboard frame, thus making the first addressing machine
      stencil.  These stencils were inserted into the typewriter, one at a
      time, and the name and address cut into the paper by the needle-point type
      with which the early stencil-cutting typewriters were equipped.  The
      stencils were then fed through the addressing machine and the envelope
      addressed, the outline of the letters being dotted." (W. H.
      Leffingwell,  The Office Appliance Manual, 1926, pp. 406-07) According to a 1924 account, "The original addressing machine invented in 1878 by Frank Belknap,
      now the Rapid Addressing Machine Company [which was founded by Belknap in
      1885], was designed as an aid in
      addressing envelopes. The characters were cut on a strip of paper.
      Perforations on the side, similar to the perforations on the film for
      moving pictures, afforded a means of drawing the strip through the
      machine. Later, separate cards made up of a piece of parchment paper
      pasted to a cardboard frame were used." (The American Digest of
      Business Machines, 1924.) 
       
      In 1889, small manual printing presses, such as the Patent Lever
      Self-Inker Press No. 2 pictured to the right, were promoted as envelope
      addressing machines. According to Scientific American (May 4,
      1889), Smith's Patent Lever Self-Inker No. 3, made by the R. H. Smith Mfg.
      Co., Springfield, MA, is "especially designed for printing the
      addresses on envelopes, postal cards, and shipping tags, which it does
      rapidly and in a most perfect manner, using metal-bodied rubber-faced
      type, and the office boy can in his leisure moments set up the addresses
      and print a complement of envelopes for each of the firm's regular
      correspondents." 
       
       The
      Couch Automatic Addresser was marketed in 1890.  According to a
      product review, "It is almost the size of a type-writer.  By
      inserting the postal card or envelope immediately under the stamp above
      the cylinder, as shown in the cut [see image to right], and giving the
      stamp a light blow, the name and address is plainly and nearly printed,
      and at the same time the cylinder is revolved automatically to the next
      [name and address]. The name and address of each correspondent are
      stereotyped and then cut into slugs, each being made to fit into the
      dove-tailed grooves in the cylinder."  
      "In 1890, another inventor, Walter E. Crane, brought out a
      keyboard machine which embossed names and addresses on paper and metal.
      Thin brass was used. The thin brass was in continuous long strips. To
      print the addresses, the continuous strips of brass were run over a drum
      on high-speed addressing machines." (Leffingwell, pp. 407-09.) 
        "In 1892, Joseph S. Duncan, now President of the Addressograph
      Company, invented a machine that imprinted names and addresses from rubber
      type glued on a block of wood. He later designed a metal frame in which
      might be set individual pieces of rubber type. Later came the Graphotype,
      a machine for embossing type on metal plates." The earliest
      advertisement that we have found for an Addressograph machine dates from
      1896. The ad states that the machine could address 2,000
      envelopes per hour. The ad shows the machine (left, with enlarged detail
      to right), which bears an
      1896 patent date. The address plates, which were
      connected to form endless chains, appear to use rubber type. 
      The use of rubber type in 1896 is consistent with the fact that the
      earliest patent date on the Graphotype, the machine that was used to
      emboss letters on metal address plates, was 1899. On a standard Graphotype, a letter was dialed and then a
      handle was pulled to emboss that letter on a metal plate.  
       
 In 1899, Addressograph
      advertised the foot-powered No. 2 addressing machine, which was similar in
      appearance to the 1896 machine pictured to the
      left, for
      use with metal plates connected to form continuous chains. The price was $40. The
      No. 2, or a machine very much like it, was still advertised during 1902
      and 1903.  In 1903, an ad claimed that the machine could print 3,000
      envelopes, tags, checks, etc., per hour.  The same ad claimed that
      11,000 merchants were using Addressographs. 
      
      In 1906, attachments were available so that the Addressograph could print
      addresses on various types of form. 
       
       
      We have seen an 1893 advertisement by Blackner Bros. & Co., Chicago,
      IL, for the Perfect Envelope Addresser, with a claim that it would print
      1,500 names per hour on envelopes, postal cards, etc.  This ad does
      not include an illustration.
       
       
       In 1907, Addressograph
      offered  Card Index Addressographs that printed addresses using separate
      plates that were loaded in a vertical hopper. These machines, one of which
      is pictured to the left, were $73 including an oak cabinet.  Immediately
      to the right is a picture of one of the metal plates.  
       
      In 1907, the Addressograph Co. advertised "30,000 Addressographs in
      Use."
In 1913, it claimed that 40,000 entities used its machines. (System, Oct. 1913). 
      Until at least 1910, Addressograph offered two types of address printing
      machines, ones that used plates with sliding rubber type and others that
      used embossed metal plates. 
      While the first Graphotype patent dates from 1899, initially customers
      using metal address plates may have been required to have the addresses
      embossed on the plates by the Addressograph Co.  However, by 1910,
      Addressograph was selling its Office Graphotype. According to a 1910 ad,
      "The Office Graphotype is an electric motor driven machine for
      stamping addresses on metal plates. It was designed especially for users
      of the Metal Card Index System." The machine was $350. An illustration is provided
      below. An
      Addressograph machine is pictured in the 1911 catalog of Hesser Business
      College, Manchester, NH. 
      Eventually, Addressograph offered hand and
      electric-powered addressing machines to print addresses, as well as
      foot-powered models. In 1924, Addressograph printing machines ranged from $37.50 for a hand-operated model that could print about 1,000 addresses per hour,
      and $190 for a foot-operated machine, to $1,500
      for a large automatic-feed electric machine that could print 9,600 addresses
      per hour. Hand operated Graphotypes were $145 to $260, electric models were $395 to $460,
      and the keyboard model was $850.  
      Graphotype and Addressograph Machines, c. 1910-1924 
      
        
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            Hand Graphotype
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            Office Graphotype, 1910
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            Model B Card Index Addressograph
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            Operation Step 1
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            Operation Step 2
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            Operation Step 3
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            Automatic Number Three, 1923
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      Source of preceding row of images:  Museum
      of Business History and Technology 
       
      A number of companies in addition to Addressograph produced hand-operated, foot-powered, and
      electric addressing machines in the early 20th century. Additional brands marketed during
      1902-25 were
      the Addressall, Belknap/Rapid, Elliott, Meacham, Montague/Direx-All,
      Rogers, Standard, and Velox. Some of these machines
      used metal plates like those used with the Addressograph, while others
      used fiber stencil address cards. In 1915, the Montague Mailing Machinery Co, Chattanooga, TN, offered 20 types of addressing machines for $15 and up.  A very simple stamper, which had an output of 300-500/hr, was $15. The desktop Type C, output of 1500/hr, was $37.50. Type N, output 2000-3000/hr, $150.  Type F, output 3000-4000/hr, $250-$360. (System, Jan. & Mar. 1915.) 
      Belknap Addressing Machines, 1902, 1915 
      
        
            | 
            
            Belknap Rotary Rapid Addressing Machine, 1902 ad 
             
             
            Source of left and right images:   
            Museum of Business History and Technology | 
            
            Belknap Rotary Rapid Addressing Machine | 
         
        
          | . | 
          
 
   
            Belknap Rotary Addressing Machine 
Rapid Addressing Machine Co. 
This machine used stencils. 
1915 Price $57.50.  Ten other models priced up to $1500. (System, Mar. 1915.) 
 
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          . | 
         
       
      "In 1897 Sterling Elliott devised an addressing system.  His
      machine embodied principles of construction and operation not found in the
      others.  It was designed primarily for his private use and was not
      marketed until 1900."  (Leffingwell, p. 410.) The Elliott Addressing Machine Co. introduced fiber address
      stencil cards during the first decade of the 20th century. Addresses were cut on the fiber cards using a
      standard typewriter or a stenciling machine. To print
      addresses, ink was forced through the stencil cards. (The American Digest of
      Business Machines, 1924)   
      Elliott Stenciling and Addressing Machines, 1905 and
      1920s 
      
        
            
            Elliott Stencil Cutting Machine, 1905.  1906 Price $150. | 
           
              
    
            Left:  Elliott Addressing Machine, 1905. 1906 Price $65. 
            Right: Cabinet
            for Stencils for Elliott Addressing Machines, 1906 ad | 
         
        
            
            Elliott Hand Stenciling Machine, 1920s | 
            
            Elliott Electric Stenciling Machines, 1920s | 
            
            Elliott Hand Cranked Addressing Machine, 1920s | 
            
            Elliott Foot-Lever Addresser, 1920s | 
         
       
       In 1913, Hillard Mfg Co., NYC, advertised its Meacham Addressing Machine, which appeared comparable to the 1902 Belknap machine above left and which used silk stencils that were cut on a regular typewriter. This could be used to fill addresses that matched typewriting into form letters.(System, Sept. 1913.)
  
In 1914-15, Elliott advertised its hand, foot,and electric powered addressing machines, which had output rates of 1500, 3000, and 4000 addresses/hr, for $35, $90, and $185, respectively. (System, Jan. 1915) In 1917, the price range was $50 to $200. In 1924, the price range was $35 for a hand model to $500 for an automatic feed model.  
      
       
       In 1907, Addressograph was marketing its Dupligraph machine (pictured
      right), "the highest development of the process of producing
      imitation typewritten letters." The machine simultaneously printed
      the text of a letter (prepared using sliding type), a name and address
      (using an Addressograph plate), a choice of salutation (Dear Sir or
      Gentlemen), and a signature (in a different color ink), all at the rate of
      800 to 1,200 per hour.  In 1927, American Multigraph introduced the Addressing
      Multigraph, which used metal plates to print addresses and form letters
      simultaneously.
       In 1930, the Addressograph International Corp. acquired the
    American Multigraph Co.  In 1931 the name of the merged firm was
      changed to the Addressograph-Multigraph Corp.  In 1979, the company
      name was changed to AM International Inc.  AM International was still
      operating in 1985. The following two photographs were
      taken at an Addressograph sales outlet in 1929.  The first shows a
      room with ten Addressograph machines of various types, including three
      Graphotype machines.  The second shows a shop with men working on two
      Addressograph machines.  In the latter photo, the machine on the left
      is a desktop manual Addressograph attached to a work stand.  The
      machine on the left is labeled Automatic Envelope Feed Addressograph.   
         
      Addressograph Machines, 1929
    
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      Dick addressing machine, 1859.  This illustration
      shows the machine atop a stack of papers.  "A" identifies
      the paper column of addresses as it emerges from the tank of liquid
      adhesive inside the machine. "D" identifies the cutter that is
      pivoted down to cut off one address at a time and press it onto the top
      paper. 
       
        
      Longley addressing machine, 1875, serial no. 918. The vertical bar in
      the middle of the photo is the cutter. The item to the right is the tank
      for liquid adhesive.  This tank, which appears to be handmade, fits
      into the machine.
       
        
      Dick addressing machine, 1889 patent model. 
      Courtesy of  Barry Baldwin.   
      For sale on his website,  
      Patent Models from the 1800s 
       
        
       Mustang Mailer, 1883 ad 
      
      
        
       Patent Lever Self-Inker Press No. 2, 1889 ad 
      
       
        
      Graphotype Model 6142, patented 1917 
       
        
      Woman with Keyboard Electric Graphotype at 24th National Business Show,
      1927 
       
        
      Hand-Operated Addressograph Model H3, Patented
      1904-12 
       
        
      Office with Electric Addressograph (left) and Graphotype, Washington, DC,
      c. 1922, detail. 
      Lib. of Cong., Prints and Photographs Div., LC-USZ62-111333 
       
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
       
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
      
       
       
       
        
        
        
      
       
        
      Elliott Addressing Machine 
      
      Courtesy of Martin Howard Collection 
      
      www.antiquetypewriters.com
       
       
      
        
   
        
      Elliott Hand Crank Rotary Addresser, 1920s-1930s 
   
       
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    Envelope Sealers 
       
      Beginning around 1900, a large variety of small devices and
      larger machines were marketed for use in sealing envelopes.  A number
      of images of Standard Envelope Sealers are presented immediately below,
      and images of a number of other envelope sealers are presented to the
      right.
      Sealograph and Standard Envelope Sealers, 1912-1930 
      
        
            
            Sealograph Model A  
            Hand Power, c. 1912 | 
            
            Sealograph Model B 
            Electric Hand Feed, c. 1912 | 
            
            Electric Sealograph. Image appears in System, Oct. 1913. | 
          Image
            coming H 
            Standard Envelope Sealer Model C c. 1916-27.
  Image coming Standard Envelope Sealer Model F $25 1915 The ad claimed that Model F had an output of 6000-9000/hr.   (System, Mar. 1915) | 
            
      Standard Envelope Sealer 
      Model F., advertised 1930 
            Courtesy of Martin Howard Collection 
      www.antiquetypewriters.com
       | 
           
              
            Standard Envelope Sealer Model H, patented 1914-18, advertised 1930 | 
         
       
      Source of three images above left:  Museum
      of Business History and Technology 
      Standard Envelope Sealers were put on the market in 1914. In March 1915, an ad stated "More than 6,000 Standard Sealers sold in the first eight months after being put on the market." 
      Advertisements for Envelope Sealers  
      
        
          | Year
            Advertised | 
          Machine
            Name | 
          Manufacturer | 
          Source
            and information about machine. | 
         
        
          | 1899 | 
          Pletcher
            Envelope Moistener and Sealer | 
          Benj. F.
            Pletcher, Lock Haven, PA  | 
           BK97
            (small $1) | 
         
        
          | 1902-03 | 
          Thexton Electric Envelope
            Sealer 
             | 
           Thexton Electric Envelope Sealer Co.,
      Chicago, IL. | 
           BK43,
            BK0603p.145 ($50) 
            Add image. | 
         
        
          | 1904 | 
          Thexton Junior Envelope
            Sealer | 
           Thexton Electric Envelope Sealer Co.,
      Chicago, IL | 
           BK04 ($15, non-electric) | 
         
        
          | 1904-05 | 
          Thexton Envelope Sealing
            Machines | 
           Acorn Brass Mfg. Co., Chicago, IL | 
          BK04.929 ($15-$50),
            Beach 1905 | 
         
        
          | 1903-04 | 
          Eureka Envelope Moistener and
            Sealer | 
          Eureka
            Novelty Co, Boston, MA | 
          BK03&04
            (small, $0.50).
            Beach 1905 | 
         
        
          | 1905 | 
          Shermac Universal Envelope
            Sealer | 
           Hall Office Specialty Co., Chicago,
            IL | 
          BK05.1078 ($5),
            Beach 1905 | 
         
        
          | 1905 | 
          Cleveland
            Envelope Sealer and Stamper | 
          Cleveland
            Envelope Sealer Co, Chicago, IL | 
          Beach 1905 | 
         
        
          | 1905
             1907  | 
          Addressograph
            Envelope Sealer
             Addressograph "Junior"
            and "Senior
      Electric" Envelope Sealing Machines 
           | 
          Addressograph
            Co., Chicago, IL | 
          Beach 1905,
            sealed 3000 to 7000 envelopes per hour
             Junior $20,
            Senior Electric $60.  | 
         
        
          | 1905 | 
          Elliott
            Envelope Sealer | 
          Elliott
            Addressing Machine Co., Boston, MA | 
          Beach 1905 | 
         
        
          | 1905 | 
          Hunt Stamp
            and Envelope Moistener | 
          F. P. Hunt
            Co., New York, NY | 
          Beach 1905
            {Small device. Good illustration] | 
         
        
          | 1906 | 
          American Envelope
            Sealer | 
           American Sales & Mfg Co, Kansas City | 
          
      (small hand gadget) | 
         
        
          | 1906 | 
          Perfect Envelope
            Sealer | 
           A.T. Kline
            Mercantile Co., Somerville, NJ | 
          See image to
            right | 
         
        
          | 1907 | 
          Hasty Envelope
            Sealer | 
           A.T. Kline
            Mercantile Co., Somerville, NJ | 
          . | 
         
        
          | 1908 | 
          Richissin
            Envelope Sealer, patented 1907 | 
          . | 
          Tower p. 37
            (small) | 
         
        
          | 1908-10 | 
          Simplex Automatic Envelope Sealing
            Machine | 
           Simplex Mfg. Co., New
      York, NY | 
          S1008, S1208 (large electric), A. Pomerantz & Co cat. 1910
      ($165).  See image to right. | 
         
        
          | 1908 | 
          Automatic Envelope Sealing & Stamping
            Machine | 
           Automatic Envelope
      Sealing & Stamping Machine Co, Providence RI | 
          (large machine, seals,
      stamps and counts letters) S1208. | 
         
        
          | 1909 | 
          Packer Envelope
            Sealer | 
          B. E. Del Camp, Chicago, IL. | 
           ($2) | 
         
        
          | 1910 | 
          Saunders Envelope
            Sealer | 
           Saunders Sealer Co., Cleveland, OH | 
          ($2) | 
         
        
          | 1912-22 | 
          Reynolds Envelope
            Sealer, patented 1910 | 
          . | 
           Horder's Catalog (1922) p. 184. 
            See photo to right. | 
         
        
          | 1912 | 
          Sanitary Envelope Moistener &
            Sealer | 
          . | 
           Binney & Smith Co NY p.
      11 | 
         
        
          | 1913 | 
          Roco Envelope
            Sealer | 
           G. E. Stimpson Co, gen agents, Worcester, MA | 
          
      $10. S1013 | 
         
 | 1913 | 
          Novelty Envelope
            Sealer | 
           Office Appliance Mfg. & Novelty Co., NY, NY & Pittsburgh, PA | 
          $10. 
      S0913 | 
         
 | 1913 | 
          Office Boy Envelope
            Sealer | 
           Borger Mfg. Co., Cleveland, OH | 
          $15. 
      S1113 | 
         
        
          | 1913-14 | 
           
            Sealograph | 
           Saunders & Co., Kansas City,
            MO | 
          Model A (hand power)
      and Model C (electric power) S0314 | 
         
        
          | 1914 | 
          Pence Mailing
            Machine | 
           Pence Mailing Machine Co., Minneapolis,
            MN | 
          
      Large machine. Seals and affixes stamps on 6,000 envelopes per hour.
      Literary Digest 091414. | 
         
        
          | 1914-24 | 
          Acorn-Thexton Envelope
            Sealer  | 
           Acorn Brass Mfg. Co., Chicago,
            IL | 
           "O.K'd by 10,000...businesses." S0315. $27.50-$80 S0315, S0917-S1217.  | 
         
  | 1915 | 
          Red Square Envelope Sealer  | 
           Red Square Co., NY, NY | 
          Hand crank, $25 S0315. | 
         
        
          | 1916-30 | 
          Standard Envelope
            Sealer, patented 1914-18 | 
           Standard Envelope Sealer Mfg. Co.,
      Somerville, MA | 
           Model C $15-$25 S0917-1217. | 
         
        
          | 1917-18 | 
          Kendall Envelope Sealer, Kendall Mfg. Co., Boston, MA  | 
          . | 
           (small hand
      gadget) | 
         
        
          | 1922 | 
          Graywood Envelope
            Sealer | 
           Graywood Mfg Co., Lynn, MA | 
          (similar to 1924
      Elliott) | 
         
        
          | 1924-39 | 
          Elliott Envelope Sealer | 
          . | 
          $45 in 1924.
            See photo to right | 
         
        
          | . | 
          Standard Postal
      Permit Printer and Sealer | 
          
      Standard Mailing Machines Co., Everett, MA | 
          Affixed and postmarked stamps to
      envelopes and counted and sealed the envelopes. | 
         
       
     | 
    
         
        
        
      Perfect Envelope Sealer ( a.k.a.
      Eagle Safety Envelope Fastening and Sealing Press, Cachet Crampon) 
      Advertised in U.S. 1906 (Perfect), France in 1913, and U.K. 1920s (Eagle). Sold by Blanzy Poure & Cie
      Boulogne sur Mer, France (Cachet Crampon) 
       
        
      Thexton Electric Envelope Sealer,  
      1903 ad 
       
       
       
        
      Simplex Envelope Sealer, 1908 ad 
       
        
      
       
        
      Reynolds Envelope Sealer,  
 patented 1910 
       
        
      
        
      Elliott Envelope Sealer, 
      c. 1924-39 
       
       
       
       
        
      Bruce Envelope Sealer, Framingham, MA, Patent Number 1,837,156,
      Dec. 15, 1931. 
     | 
   
  
    | Stamp Machines
       
      Stamp Affixers
       
       
        Stamp affixers served two purposes. First, they
      mechanized the process of affixing stamps to letters. Second, they made it
      more difficult for employees to steal stamps. The image to the left shows
      the Postage Stamp Affixer marketed by Wm. H. King in 1890.  A 1900 ad claimed
      that the Klein Stamp Sticker, which was patented in 1899, had a capacity of 300 stamps and moisture for
      2,000 stamps. The illustration [coming] shows that the stamps were
      stacked vertically inside the machine. The Alert Post Stamp Machine was
      advertised in 1905. 
       
      
      Stamp vending machines were introduced shortly
      after 1900. Initially, private companies made coils of stamps from sheets
      issued by the government. The US Post Office began to issue coils in 1908,
      and shortly after that a number of companies began to market stamp
      affixing machines that used coil stamps. 
       
      The White Stamp Affixer, which was advertised during
      1910-16, was a desk-top machine. The National Stamp Affixer (pictured to
      the right) was another desk-top machine. The Automatic Envelope Sealing
      and Stamping Machine, which was advertised in 1911, sealed and stamped
      5,000 to 8,000 envelopes per hour, using coils of stamps purchased from
      the post office.
       
      The Multipost Stamp Affixer &
      Recorder, a smaller handheld device made by Multipost Co., Rochester, NY, was patented in 1911 and advertised from 1910 to 1940. There were two models at $15 & $25.  A 1915 ad stated that there were 20,000 users. (System, Mar. 1915.)
  The Kendall, Postamper, Simplex, Standard, and Wizard stamp affixers, which were advertised during
      1912-27, were similar to the Multipost. In 1915, the Postamper was $25 and the 
wizard was $12.50. (System, Mar. 1915) One difference between the lower and higher priced models seems to have been the amount of data recorded. According to
      a Postamper ad, "One stroke of the plunger affixes the stamp and also counts it. A
      measured drop of water moistens the envelope and a rubber cushion presses
      the stamp to the moistened surface. Double lock safeguards your stamps.
      One for the cashier who puts in the stamps--the other for the operator, so
      that no stamps can be taken without his knowledge." 
       
      Stamp Perforators 
       
      
      "The Cummins Stamp Perforator prevents all thefts of
      postage stamps.  This method was authorized by Postmaster General
      Meyer's ruling of May 4th, 1908, as follows: 'It shall be permissible to
      puncture or perforate letters, numerals or other marks or devices in the
      Unites States postage stamps.  The punctures or perforations shall
      not exceed one thirty-second of an inch in diameter.'" (System,
      Oct. 1908) 
       
      Metered Mailing Machines 
       
      In 1920, several years after Pitney invented a postage meter, Congress
      approved metered mail. Pitney-Bowes
      introduced the first postage meter and permit printing machine in 1921.
      The machines not only printed pertinent postal information on envelopes but
      also sealed the envelopes. "Metered permit mail is imprinted with the mailer's
      license and meter number, together with the postmark. This operation is
      performed simultaneously with the sealing by a permit printing machine.
      The meter is a detachable portion of such machines and it is taken to the
      post-office where it is set by the postmaster for the amount of postage
      desired, which is paid for at that time. It locks when this amount has
      been used." (Office Equipment Catalogue, 1927, pp. 71-72) The
      first Pitney-Bowes machine, the Model A, sold for $1,350 and leased for $10 a month. The second, introduced in
      1924, sold for $735. Because the equipment was expensive, in the 1920s use
      of Pitney-Bowes machines was limited to companies and other organizations
      that sent a large number of letters. During 1921-27, 2,849 Pitney-Bowes
      machines were installed. (W.
      Cahn, The Story of Pitney-Bowes, 1961, pp. 66-67, 81.) By 1927, the
      International Postal Supply Co. was marketing Sealometer postage metering
      and sealing machines in competition with Pitney-Bowes. In 1930,
      Pitney-Bowes introduced its Model H, a desktop postal meter and printing
      machine that did not seal letters. The Model H was $75. 
       
      Non-Metered Permit Mailing Machines In the 1920s, there was also
      "non-metered permit mail" in the US.  A company printed its
      permit number and a postmark on letters using a machine that did not have
      a meter. Payment for postage was made when the mail was delivered to the
      post office. Pitney-Bowes mailing machines could be used for metered
      permit mail or, without a meter, for non-metered permit mail. In 1924-27, the Standard Envelope Sealer Mfg.
      Co. advertised the Standard Postal Permit Printer and Sealer. The
      machine, which did not have a meter, automatically fed and sealed
      envelopes and printed the permit information. In 1924, this machine was $675.   | 
    
         
      Alert Post Stamp Machine, 1905 ad 
        
      National Stamp Affixer 
       
        
      Multipost Stamp Affixer & Recorder, Patented 1911, Advertised
      1910-40 
       
        
      Cummins Stamp Perforator, 
      B. F. Cummins, Chicago, IL, 1908 ad 
       
        
      Pitney-Bowes Model A Permit Printing Machine. 
      The Model A was the first Pitney-Bowes machine. It was still marketed
      in 1927. 
     | 
   
  
    Envelope Openers
  
      1884 A. B. See Letter Opener, R. R. Watson, New York, NY, $2.50 ("This
      delicate instrument cuts the end off the envelope in an instant, thus
      exposing the contents." $2.50) 
      1912 Simplex Letter Opener, Binney & Smith Co NY 
      1914-28 Ries O. K. Letter Opener, O.K. Mfg. Co., Syracuse, NY (1914). 1915 Prices $12, $15, $18 for 3 sizes. Oswego NY (1928) 
      1914-20 Lightning Letter Opener, Lightning Letter Opener Co., Rochester, NY
      (1914), The Bircher Co., Inc., Rochester NY (1920) 
      1922-25 Mihill Envelope Opener, Horder's (1922), Grammes (1925) | 
    
   
      A. B. See Letter Opener, 1884 ad
         
      Ries O.K. Letter Opener, Patented Oct. 17, 1911, also 1919.
 
        
      Lightning Letter Opener, Patented 1912-18 
    
  | 
   
  
    Folding Machines 
       
      Machines that folded letters came into use around 1907. 
       
      1907 Adams Folding Machine, Adams Folding Machine Co., Minneapolis, MN
      (folds letters) 
      1908 Universal Folding Machine, Universal Folding Machine Co, Chicago, IL.
      S1008, S1208 
      1908 National Folding Machine, National Folding Machine Co., Sidney, OH
      S1208 
      1910 Van Etten Circular Folder, Van Etten Machine Co, Sidney, OH. 
      1921 Gammeter Multigraph Folder, Gammeter Multigraph Co., Desborough. 
      1923-25 Multigraph Folder Junior, American Multigraph 
       
       
      Multigraph Folder No. 58, American Multigraph Corp., Cleveland, OH | 
      
      Adams Folding Machine, Adams Folding Machine Co.,
      Minneapolis, MN, 1907 ad. 
        
      Universal Folding Machine, Universal Folding Machine
      Co., Chicago, IL, 1908 ad. 
        
      
      Gammeter Multigraph Folder, 1921 ad; same a s the Universal Folding Machine
      above | 
   
  
    | 
       Parcel Labeling Equipment 
      
       
      Stencils were used to label shipping crates by 1860. 
      The images to the right show: (1) An example of a custom made stencil that
      could be ordered by mail by 1860. (2) A general purpose stencil that could
      be used to label a box with letters and numbers or letters only.  (3) A hand stencil cutting
      outfit.  
       
      The last image to the right shows a Holt's Patent Marking Wheel, a
      self-inking rotary rubber stamp that was used to print the sender's name
      and address on parcels. 
       
      In 1868, Dennison & Co. received a patent for and was selling
      cardboard shipping labels,, including ones with attached strings. 
      Buyers had the option of having Dennison & Co. print them to order.  
       
 The images below show two rotary stencil cutting machines and a linear
      stencil cutting machine.  Stencil cutting outfits and machines were
      used to cut
      paper stencils used to label boxes.
       
         
       
        
       
      Diagraph Improved Stencil Cutting Machine, American Diagraph Co., St.
      Louis, MO. 
      A similar model was offered in 1905. 
      (Add 1908-13 advertising image.) 
       
         
 
   
      Above Top:  Bradley Stencil Machine, Bradley Stencil Machine Co., St. Louis, MO,
      patented 1893-98 
      Above Bottom: Office with Bradley Stencil Machine (center right) 
      
        
  
      
Top: Bradley Stencil Machine, Bradley Stencil Machine Co., St. Louis, MO, patented 1893-99, introduced 1898,  
      A. J. Bradley, NY, NY, 1915 ad  Bottom: Photo right courtesy of Jim Brown
  
The Marsh Stencil Cutting Machine was advertised by Horder's Inc. in 1928.
      | 
    
       
        
      Custom-made stencils of this type could be ordered by mail by 1860 
       
       
       
        
      Revolving Stencil Letters & Figures, patented 1868-71, still advertised
      1928 
       
        
      Stencil Cutting Outfit, New York Stencil Works
         
      Holt's Patent Marking Wheel, Secombe Manufacturing Co., New
      York, NY, patented 1866, advertised 1870.  This roller, which
      had rubber type, was used to print manufacturers' and distributors' names
      and addresses on packages.
    
  | 
   
  
    | Postal Scales
       The UK introduced both postal rates based on weight and adhesive postage stamps in 1840. Other countries soon followed,
      and as a result there was a market for letter scales. The photographs in the column to the right show
      two styles of letter scales that
      were introduced around 1840. The top one is a candlestick spring scale of
      a type that was marketed until the 1870s. Below that is an English
      Roberval balance scale of a type that was marketed until around 1940.  
       
        The
      images to the left and right show two Perfection Postal Scales, 
      While these scales were reportedly manufactured by the Perfection Scale
      Co., Cortland, NY, the one to the left has the following on its front:
      "Automatic Perfection Postal Scale, American Machine Co., Philada." 
      It also has an 1868 patent date. An 1892 product review stated that
      "The Perfection Postal Scales have been adopted for use in the postal
      service of the United States.  They are becoming quite generally used
      in banks, insurance and railroad office and in the better class of
      manufacturing and mercantile houses throughout the country." 
        
      To
      the left is a Fairbanks letter balance scale of a type that was patented
      in 1876 and advertised by 1878.  To the right is an 1883 ad for a
      Fairbanks post office package scale.  The same image appeared in a 1910 office supply catalog offers this machine.  Fairbanks began to manufacture scales (not postal scales) in 1830. 
       
       
 To
      the left is an 1884 ad for an R. R. Watson Postal Balance.
      
 
 
  
      Montgomery Ward's 1894-95 mail order
      catalog advertised a Victor letter balance with the same design as the
      Roberval scale in the photo to the right.  Scales of this type were advertised
      in Germany in 1910 and France in 1913. 
       Spring
      balance scales were advertised by the Gilfillan Scale & Hardware   Co.
      in 1895 (see ad to right) and marketed in 1897 and for decades after that by the Pelouze Scale and
      Mfg. Co. The model in the Zodiac pattern to the left was marketed by
      Tiffany Studios of New York in the late 1890s and early 1900s. 
       
        
       
       
       
       To the
      left is a bilateral pendulum scale of a type that was patented in
      Germany in 1904 and advertised in Germany in 1908-10, the US in 1910, and France in 1913.  
        
       
       
       
       
       
 For photographs of a number of additional styles of early
      postal scales, click on the following links to visit the exhibits at the Canadian
      Postal Museum and Scales
      & Weights. 
    
  | 
    
        
        
      Candlestick spring scale, Jos. Edm. Ratcliff, UK. The candlestick scale
      was introduced in 1840.  A similar Spring Pillar Balance was
      advertised in 1855. 
      
        
      Roberval balance scale, England, style introduced 1840.
      Similar scales advertised 1855 & 1878, and in France in 1913. 
       
        
      Letter Balance, 1883 ad 
       
        
      Peerless Letter Scale, Marshall Son & co., Boston, MA, 1883 ad. 
      A similar scale was advertised in France in 1913. 
     | 
   
  
    Tape and Label Moisteners & Dispensers 
       
      Mail rooms in the late 1800s and early 1900s were equipped with
      a variety of stamp, envelope, label, and tape moisteners as well as
      pasting machines. 
       
      
      
      1907 Universal Pasting Machine, Chas. Beck Paper Co., Philadelphia, PA. 
      1912 Universal Pasting Machine, Binney & Smith Co NY p. 22 
      1912 Jiffy Gummed Tape Machine, Binney & Smith Co NY p. 43 
      1922 Liberty Tape Moistener, Horder's p. 184 
       
       
      1918 Star No. 6 tape dispenser.  Also advertised by Horder's Inc. in 1928. | 
      
      Glass Dampener, 1881 ad.  The same image was used in a 1910 office supply catalog that offered this item, and a similar if not identical item was offered in the 1928 Holder's Inc. catalog.
  
        
       
        
      Labelor Model 101, Better Packages, Inc., Shelton, CT   
        
      Universal Pasting Machine, Chas. Back Paper Co., Philadelphia, PA, 1907
      ad. | 
   
 
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