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Dod Protractor and Parallel Rule

American History Museum

Dod Protractor and Parallel Rule
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  • Dod Protractor and Parallel Rule
  • Dod Protractor and Parallel Rule - in case

    Object Details

    maker

    Dod, Lebbeus

    Description

    This brass semicircular protractor is divided by single degrees and marked by tens from 10° to 90° to 10°. It is attached with metal screws to a set of brass parallel rules. Brass S-shaped hinges connect the rules to each other. The bottom left screw on the parallel rules does not attach to the bottom piece. A rectangular brass arm is screwed to the center of the protractor. A thin brass piece screwed to the arm is marked with a small arrow for pointing to the angle markings. The protractor is stored in a wooden case, which also contains a pair of metal dividers (5-1/4" long).
    The base of the protractor is signed: L. Dod, Newark. Lebbeus Dod (1739–1816) manufactured mathematical instruments in New Jersey and is credited with inventing the parallel rule protractor. He served as a captain of artillery during the Revolutionary War and made muskets. His three sons, Stephen (1770–1855), Abner (1772–1847), and Daniel (1778–1823), were also noted instrument and clock makers. The family was most associated with Mendham, N.J. (where a historic marker on N.J. Route 24 indicates Dod's house), but Dod is known to have also lived at various times in Newark.
    ID number MA.310890 is a similar protractor and parallel rule. Compare also to a Dod instrument owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, http://www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/5535.
    References: Bethuel Lewis Dodd and John Robertson Burnet, "Biographical Sketch of Lebbeus Dod," in Genealogies of the Male Descendants of Daniel Dod . . . 1646–1863 (Newark, N.J., 1864), 144–147; Alexander Farnham, "More Information About New Jersey Toolmakers," The Tool Shed, no. 120 (February 2002), http://www.craftsofnj.org/Newjerseytools/Alex%20Farnham%20more%20Jeraey%20Tools/Alex%20Farnham.htm; Deborah J. Warner, “Surveyor's Compass,” National Museum of American History Physical Sciences Collection: Surveying and Geodesy, http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/surveying/object.cfm?recordnumber=747113; Peggy A. Kidwell, "American Parallel Rules: Invention on the Fringes of Industry," Rittenhouse 10, no. 39 (1996): 90–96.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Gift of Ruth A. Ming

    date made

    late 1700s

    ID Number

    1978.2110.06

    accession number

    1978.2110

    catalog number

    336732

    Object Name

    protractor
    protractor and parallel rule

    Other Terms

    protractor; Semi-Circular, with Parallel Rule

    Physical Description

    leather (overall material)
    wood (overall material)
    brass (overall material)

    Measurements

    overall: 2.9 cm x 33.5 cm x 14 cm; 1 5/32 in x 13 3/16 in x 5 1/2 in

    place made

    United States: New Jersey, Newark

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Mathematics
    Science & Mathematics
    Protractors
    Parallel Rules

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Subject

    Mathematics
    Protractor
    Parallel Rule
    Dividers
    Drawing Instruments
    Revolutionary War

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a7-60b0-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_904462

    Discover More

    Parallel rule and t-square. It has a wooden handle attached to a wooden crossbar and brass protractor by a large brass thumbscrew

    Parallel Rules

    Light wooden blackboard compass. One end has a rubber tip, and the other has a chalk tip.

    Dividers

    Dietzgen 1298-D Blackboard Protractor

    Innovation

    Parallel rule and t-square. It has a wooden handle attached to a wooden crossbar and brass protractor by a large brass thumbscrew

    Parallel Rules

    Parallel rule and t-square. It has a wooden handle attached to a wooden crossbar and brass protractor by a large brass thumbscrew

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