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Eagle Pencil Company Model 569 Compass and Divider

American History Museum

Drawing Compass by Eagle Pencil Company
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Object Details

maker

Eagle Pencil Company

Description

This metal compass is noticeably corroded. The compass is held together by a screw at the top. A spring inside the mechanism below the screw allows the two legs to be squeezed together. The mechanism is marked on both sides: EAGLE PENCIL CO. (/) NEW YORK (/) PAT. DEC.11.1894 (/) PAT. GT.BRITAIN. The legs are embossed with a floral pattern. The two needle points slide into slots at the end of each leg. One point is made of the same metal as the compass. The other point is a metal that does not corrode, possibly German silver. The German silver point is reversible and holds a pencil lead in its other end.
German immigrant Heinrich Berolzheimer opened Eagle Pencil Company as a pencil shop in New York City in 1856, with a factory in Yonkers. By 1880, the firm made mechanical pencils as well as pens and erasers. In 1969, the company changed its name to Berol Corporation, and the Empire Pencil Corporation purchased it in 1986. Harrison Cole of Columbus, Ohio, applied on April 16, 1894, for a patent on a braking screw bolt that would help compasses or dividers stay set in position and received it on December 11 that year. The Brown University mathematics department donated this instrument to the Smithsonian in 1973. Compare to 1981.0933.17.
References: Harrison Cole, "Drawing Instrument" (U.S. Patent 530,680 issued December 11, 1894); "Eagle Divider and Compass," School Journal 56 (1898): 389.

Location

Currently not on view

Credit Line

Gift of Brown University Department of Mathematics

date made

ca 1900

ID Number

MA.304722.04

accession number

1973.304722

catalog number

304722.04

Object Name

compass
compass, drawing

Physical Description

metal (overall material)

Measurements

overall: 1 cm x 13 cm x 3.2 cm; 13/32 in x 5 1/8 in x 1 1/4 in

place made

United States: New York, New York City

See more items in

Medicine and Science: Mathematics
Science & Mathematics
Dividers and Compasses

Data Source

National Museum of American History

Subject

Mathematics
Education

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a7-37dc-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

Record ID

nmah_904328

Discover More

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

Combination Instruments

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