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Brandt Automatic Cashier

American History Museum

Brandt Automatic Cashier
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Object Details

maker

Brandt Manufacturing Company

Description

By the late 19th century, many American workers were paid in cash. Putting together packets with precisely the right bills and coins was a tedious task. In the 1890s, Edward J. Brandt, a cashier at the Bank of Watertown in Watertown, Wisconsin, invented a machine that could dispense change automatically.
The machine dispenses change in amounts between 1 cent and 99 cents. It has eight channels across the front, three for pennies, one for nickels, two for dimes, one for quarters and one for 50-cent pieces. Above and behind the channels is an array of 99 plastic keys, numbered from 1 to 99. Pressing another key, marked "5," releases five pennies. On the right are keys marked 10, 25, 25 and 100 that give change for these amounts. The entire coin holder can be removed from the mechanism for storage of coins. Pushing down a key moves a bar that pushes coins from a channel into a compartment with a trap door at its base. Pushing the trap door back releases change into the hand.
A mark on the front and the back of the machine reads reads: BRANDT AUTOMATIC CASHIER. A mark on a brass plate on the back of the machine reads: PATENTED (/) JULY 11, 1899. . . (/) DEC. 12, 1916 (/) 48184 93421 10014 PATENTS PENDING (/) T.M.Reg.U.S.Pat.Off. (/) Brandt Manufacturing Company (/) WATERTOWN, WISCONSIN. The serial number, marked on the right side at the front, is 22446.
Brandt’s machine received medals at the 1900 Universal Exposition in Paris and the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair. This example dates from the 1920s.
References:
James H. McCarthy, The American Digest of Business Machines, Chicago, 1924, p. 196–197.
Charles J. Wallman, Edward J. Brandt, Inventor, Watertown, WI: Brandt, Inc., 1984.
Accession file.

Location

Currently not on view

Credit Line

Wittenbach Business Systems

date made

ca 1925

ID Number

2001.0011.01

accession number

2001.0011

catalog number

2001.0011.01

Object Name

coin changer

Physical Description

nickel (overall material)
plastic (overall material)
steel (overall material)
metal (overall material)
rubber (overall material)

Measurements

overall: 28.3 cm x 23.5 cm x 36 cm; 11 5/32 in x 9 1/4 in x 14 3/16 in

See more items in

Medicine and Science: Mathematics
Computers & Business Machines
Cash and Credit Registers

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Subject

Mathematics
Business

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a7-2ce7-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_904527

Discover More

A National Cash Register brand cash register. It is tan with multicolored buttons.

Other Mechanical Cash Registers

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