Stainsby-Berridge Braille Writer

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Record 11/164
Copyright Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind
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Credit line Gift of the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired, 1998.1
Date ca. 1922
Description Stainsby-Berridge Braillewriter; nickel plated steel writer in a steel framed carriage, screwed to a wooden bed; pegs on the bottom of the bed adjust the writer's position up and down a folding wooden board with a hinged paper clamp at the top; (a) writer has six "dot" keys angled away from the user on both sides, keys are "reversed" (keys arranged for writing braille in reverse as on a slate); die-plate has series of six-dot braille cells; rack serrations are half-circle cutouts; space key on right, two carriage release levers in middle back ; coil springs on "dot" keys, bard spring on space key; margin bell on left, mounted on bracket from the toothed rack, bell hammer on spring-wound wire to left; "B465" and "PAT. No. 177292-21" stamped on space key arm.; wooden bed has rounded corners and wooden guides on sides secured by screws; (b) wooden tablet board is hinged in middle to allow lower section to bend closed when unit is in storage, tounge on center panels joined to groved side pieces, two columns of 18 holes; hinged hardwood paper clamp on top with brad teeth in both top and bottom, brass catch locks clamp closed; front of clamp chamfered.
Dimensions H-3 W-13.75 D-14.5 inches
Dimension notes overall
Made Stainsby-Wayne
Material Nickel, steel, brass, wood
Makers mark STAINSBY BERRIDGE BRAILE WRITER
Object ID 1998.1
Object Name Braillewriter
Place of Origin England
People Stainsby, Henry
Wayne, Albert
Berridge, Harold C.
Provenance/History Used at the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired. Henry Stainsby (1859-1925), Supt. of the Birmingham Royal Institution for the Blind, along with Birmingham manufacturer Albert Wayne, introduced their portable brailler writer around 1903. Stainsby and Wayne had patented a much different braille shorthand machine in 1899-1900. This model was a variation, patented by Alfred Wayne, Arthur Wayne, and Harold C. Berridge of Birmingham, in 1922. The differences from the original Stainsby-Wayne includes changes to the bell, the die-plate, and the carriage advancing mechanism, and minor changes in the design of the paper clamp.
Search Terms Royal National Institute for the Blind
Subjects Aids for the blind and visually handicapped.
Braillewriters.
Instructional aids, tools, and supplies.
Mechanical writing.
Title Stainsby-Berridge Braille Writer
Image Courtesy Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind. Note: use of some materials may be restricted, please call before publishing in any format.

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Last modified on: April 02, 2010