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Anita Mark VIII Desktop Electronic Calculator with Manuals

American History Museum

Anita Mark VIII Desktop Electronic calculator, Front View
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  • Anita Mark VIII Desktop Electronic calculator, Front View
  • Anita Mark VIII Desktop Electronic calculator, Front View with Cover and Documentation

    Object Details

    maker

    Sumlock Comptometer LTD

    Description

    According to the accompanying instruction book, this is “the world’s first electronic desk calculator.” The full-keyboard, non-printing calculator has ten columns of plastic keys and shows 12-digit results. A column of keys for multiplication is on the left. Keys for arithmetic operations and for clearance are at the front. The machine used vacuum tubes—later electronic calculators would have transistors and then microchips.
    The Anita Mark VIII was one of two electronic calculators developed by the British Bell Punch Company in a team led by Norbert Kitz. Kitz had obtained an advanced degree in computer science at the University of London in 1951, studying under computer pioneer Andrew Booth. He applied for a patent for an “electronic calculating machine” as early as 1957. By 1961, Bell Punch exhibited its Mark VII and Mark VIII electronic calculators at trade fairs.
    A mark on the front of the machine read: ANITA. A tag on the bottom reads near the top: MODEL NO. C/VII/I006852/A. The tag also includes an extensive list of patent and patent application numbers. The last British patent listed is 868761, which was issued May 25, 1961. A mark on the plastic cover for the machine reads: ANITA
    The operating instructions for the Mark VIII received with the machine were distributed by the Inter-Continental Trading Corporation of New York, N.Y. Also received with the machine is a booklet of operating instructions for the Anita Mark 9, a similar machine.
    Norbert Kitz filed for a U.S. patent for this machine December 9, 1961(he had filed for earlier U.S. patents in 1957 and 1959), and was granted it October 18, 1966.
    References:
    Norbert Kitz, "Key Controlled Decimal Electronic Calculating Machine," U.S. Patent 3,280,315, October 18, 1966. There are extensive online discussions of the Anita electronic calculators.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    In Memory of Eston C. and Gertrude S. Farrell

    date made

    ca 1961

    ID Number

    1999.0143.01

    accession number

    1999.0143

    catalog number

    1999.0143.01

    Object Name

    electronic desktop calculator

    Physical Description

    metal (cover material)
    plastic (keys material)
    glass (components material)

    Measurements

    overall: 24.4 cm x 36.8 cm x 44.5 cm; 9 19/32 in x 14 1/2 in x 17 17/32 in

    place made

    United Kingdom

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Computers
    Computers & Business Machines
    Desktop Electronic Calculators

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Subject

    Business

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a3-ca3d-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_557378

    Discover More

    Black and white calculator. Left side keys read, "K," "C," and "CE." Middle keys are numbered 0-9. Right side keys are mathematical symbols.

    Vacuum Tubes to Transistors—From the Anita Mark VIII to Hewlett Packard and Wang

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