Lanston, Tolbert

Perteneció a una familia pobre. Con 15 años dejó los estudios, y fue voluntario en el Ejército Federal durante la guerra civil estadounidense. En 1865 trabajó en el Departamento de Pensiones del Gobierno de los Estados Unidos, donde inventó una máquina sumadora que fue la primera generadora de dinero para la compañía de Hollerith. En 1887 inventó un sistema de composición, y fundó la empresa Monotype. La idea consistía en hacer dos máquinas, un teclado, para componer; y una fundidora, para fundir los tipos. Años después inventó el primer tipo de metal caliente.

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Tolbert Lanston was the American founder of Monotype, inventing a mechanical typesetting system patented in 1887 and the first hot metal typesetter a few years later. He was born in a poor family. He quit school at the age of 15, he was a volunteer in the Federal Army during the American civil war. Last rank was sergeant. After 1865 he worked at the Pension-Department of the American Government. He worked with Seaton and Herman Hollerith (founder of IBM) on tabulating devices and invented an adding machine which was the first money-maker for Hollerith's company. Lanston's brother was a printer and evidently that connection caused his interest in automating the laborious task of hand-setting every letter in any or all texts. He resigned his post at the Pension office and devoted the remainder of his life to perfection of his machine. He created the idea but others perfected it and made the Lanston Monotype Machine Company successful. That includes J. Maury Dove, a coal merchant who became president of the company and remained there until his death in 1923, and John Sellers Bancroft, who was the mechanical genius behind the Monotype machine. The story is thoroughly developed in Tolbert Lanston and the Monotype: The Origin of Digital Typesetting. Although Lanston was an inventor, he had no education at all as an engineer. He did start his inventions to create a type-setting machine, first with the financial help of Seaton, later from J. Maury dove, coal-merchant in Washington. Letters sent to the Patent-bureau with specifications sent at: • 30 September 1885, 3 July 1886 • patent nr. 364.521 7 June 1887 • patent nr. 364.525 7 June 1887 The idea was to make lead type for printing, with two machines, the first to produce two paper-tapes, these two paper-tapes controlling the second machine to produce the type. Lanston made a series of prototypes.