Keuffel and Esser
The Keuffel and Esser Co., also known as K&E, was a drafting instrument and supplies company founded in 1867 by two German immigrants, William J. D. Keuffel and Herman Esser. It was the first American company to specialize in these products.[1]
Type | Corporation |
---|---|
Industry | Stationery and mathematical instruments |
Founded | 1867 |
Headquarters | Hoboken, New Jersey, US |
Key people | William J. D. Keuffel, Herman Esser |
Products | Slide rules, surveying instruments, drawing materials |
Subsidiaries | Young & Sons, purchased 1918 |
Keuffel and Esser was acquired by AZON Corp. in 1987.
History
Keuffel and Esser started in New York, selling drawing materials and drafting supplies. In 1876, K&E started selling surveying instruments. The four-story Keuffel and Esser Manufacturing Complex in Hoboken, New Jersey, was completed four years later.[2] K&E was incorporated in 1889.
From 1889 until World War II, K&E employed "Spider Lady" Mary Pfeiffer to manage a "spider ranch" for the firm. It produced strands of spider web used in making crosshairs for telescopic sights.[2]
In 1892, the company commissioned the architecture firm of De Lomos & Cordes to build a showroom and offices at 127 Fulton Street in Manhattan. The firm designed an eight-story brick and terracotta building in the Renaissance Revival style. The building was completed in 1893, and the company occupied it until 1961. It was designated a New York City landmark in 2005.[1]
In the first decade of the 20th century, Keuffel and Esser introduced a new line of surveying instruments based on the work of John Paoli, an Italian immigrant in Hoboken. A new Keuffel and Esser Manufacturing Complex was built in 1906, after the previous building was destroyed by fire.[2] The building was converted to housing in 1975 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on September 12, 1985.[3]
K&E acquired instrument maker Young & Sons of Philadelphia in 1918 and made it a department of the firm, retaining the brand name for a time.
The Leroy K&E Controlled Lettering System uses a pantograph for mechanical technical lettering.
In the 1960s, K&E had an office in Montreal, Quebec, at 130 Montée de Liesse. It was one of the main suppliers to major engineering firms in Québec during the thriving years of the late sixties, when the province was booming with construction activities, building highways and preparing for Expo 67.
In 1984, Rowley-Scher Reprographics, Inc., a company then based in Washington D.C., acquired K&E's reprographics businesses in Arlington, Fairfax, and Norfolk, all located in Virginia. Keuffel and Esser was acquired by AZON Corporation in 1987.
- Drafting kit (date unknown)
- Planimeter (1940s)
- Transit (1940s)
- Pocket calculator
- Fraction adder (1913)
- "Arithmometer" desk calculator
Slide rules
In 1891, K&E started manufacturing slide rules.[4] The company produced the 4139 Cooke Radio Slide Rule, designed in the mid-1930s by Nelson M. Cooke, of the Navy's Radio Materiel School, thousands of which were made. The K&E 4081-3 Log-Log Duplex Decitrig was a mainstay for engineering students and practicing engineers in the 1940s, 50s, and 60s.[5] During World War II, the company made fire-control instruments for the US government and won seven Army-Navy "E" Awards for Excellence in Production.
With the advent of the pocketable electronic calculator in the 1970s, slide rules became obsolete for most uses. Slide rules had never been very profitable for K&E, so it was not difficult to discontinue the line. K&E's market share shrank because of other technological advancements, and the firm shut down its slide-rule engraving machines in 1975.[6]
Over the years, K&E had amassed a collection of hundreds of slide rules, nomograms, and mechanical calculators, of its own make and others.[7] Around 2005, this collection (which had been acquired by successor companies) was donated to the MIT Museum (Cambridge, Massachusetts), greatly expanding their existing holdings.[8] Selected items from the archives are usually on display at the museum.[9][10]
- K&E 4181-3 slide rule, front scales
- K&E 4181-3 slide rule, rear scales
- High-precision extra-length engineering slide rule 4081-5
- Sewer slide rule
- Fetal medical slide rule
- Portland cement slide rule
- Simplified merchant's slide rule
- Braille slide rule 4081-3
References
- New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission; Dolkart, Andrew S.; Postal, Matthew A. (2009). Postal, Matthew A. (ed.). Guide to New York City Landmarks (4th ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-470-28963-1., p.24
- "Surveying the World: Keuffel & Esser + Hoboken, 1875–1968". Hoboken Historical Museum. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
- Hoboken Historical Museum, Hoboken, NJ. "Keuffel & Esser Manufacturing Complex, Third Street at Grand and Adams Street, 1906." Points of Interest. Accessed 2012-12-04.
- Keuffel & Esser (1967). Partners in Creating: The First Century of K&E, 1867-1967. p. 11.
K&E began making its own slide rules, using Cox's duplex construction, in 1891.
- Pictures of K&E Slide Rules;http://www.mccoys-kecatalogs.com/KECollection/collection.htm
- Stoll, Cliff. "When Slide Rules Ruled." Scientific American. May 2006.
- "Commons category MIT Slide Rule Collection".
- "MIT Museum measures up". MIT News. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. January 11, 2005. Retrieved 2019-05-01.
- "Slide Rules". MIT Museum. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Archived from the original on 2019-05-01. Retrieved 2019-05-01.
- "MIT Museum — Slide Rules". proundesign.com. Proun Design. Archived from the original on 2019-05-01. Retrieved 2019-05-01.