What is the Anvil and Shuttle?

The Hammond Anvil and Shuttle (A&S) model is a beautiful machine that was really for one purpose: to demonstrate the innovation of moving from a split-shuttle design, prone to breaking and difficult to manufacture, to a more durable, single element design. The anvil and shuttle mechanism patent was awarded in 1893 putting a beginning on […]

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“We don’t do Internet”

I was asked to help a friend obtain several antique typewriters (that is, pre-1920) from a serious collector. The husband and wife team had collected about three dozen machines over the years, such as a Williams, Franklin, Bennett, Blick, and Hammond. The majority during the typewriter collecting “golden years” when a Sholes and Glidden could […]

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An Interview with John Peralta

John Peralta, the brilliant artist behind Professor Fox’s Fantastic Writing Machine was very kind to answer a few burning questions about his Hammond installation. (edited slightly for clarity) “I first fell in love with Hammond’s at the home of a friend in Austin who is an avid collector of Hammond’s and Blickensderfer’s. I now own […]

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Hammond in Suspense

There is a well known photo of the Philadelphia office of the Hammond Typewriter Company. It is a fascinating window into the past for a number of reasons, least of which is what’s on the left wall. A nearly complete display of a Hammond typewriter an “exploded” view. Each of its parts are laid out […]

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Let a Thousand Innovations Bloom

In 1933, Ralph C. Coxhead purchased the rights and assets to the Hammond Typewriter Company, which had been renamed Vari-Typer. Between 1933 and 1944, Mr. Coxhead is credited with over 1,300 innovations. Mr. Coxhead himself only held a handful of patents for the Varityper. Unfortunately, it’s impossible to say which Mr. Coxhead personally created, and […]

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Gift of the Hammond

What better gift than to give someone a Hammond typewriter? James B. Hammond gave machines to many people and institutions, but only one survives. King Alfonso XIII James Hammond gifted an ornate gold Hammond Multiplex to the King of Spain, Alfonso XIII. Mundo Gráfico magazine (June 3, 1914) described it as “made of gold, specially […]

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Is it a 2 or a 12?

Hammond models 2 and 12 are sometimes indistinguishable from one another. The Hammond No. 2 is a rare machine, not many were made, but the subtle differences between the 2 and the 12 confuse many. Hopefully this will help clear things up. This is a Hammond No. 2 This is NOT a No. 2. What’s […]

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Mr. Flagler’s St. Augustine

On July 26, 1890 – almost 133 years ago to the day – Henry M. Flagler sent this letter to the Hammond Typewriter Company of 77 Nassau St, in New York City. This simple request for a ribbon would be quite banal if it were not for the man who wrote it and his possible […]

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Factory Tour

Welcome to the Hammond Typewriter Company, maker of the finest type writing machine in the world, for all nations and tongues. Our factory and main offices are located between 69th and 70th Streets, along the beautiful East River of Manhattan. Join us on a tour of our factory.

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Seized Anvil

The Anvil is a fundamental part of almost every Hammond ever made. Over the course of one hundred years the anvil can become seized inside the machine. Unfortunately they often look like this… Removing the Anvil This is one of the most dangerous repairs of a Hammond because you will need to apply pressure and […]

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