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Lyman Protracting Trigonometer Signed Heller & Brightly

American History Museum

Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer
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  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer - in case
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer - instructions in lid of case
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer - instructions in lid of case
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer
  • Drawing Instrument - Trigonometer - instructions in lid of case

    Object Details

    maker

    Heller & Brightly

    Description

    This metal drawing instrument allows civil engineers to translate their measurements into drawings with a minimum of calculation. It consists of a flat steel base bar 81.5 cm (about 32 inches) long, a semicircular protractor with a flat plate along the diameter that slides along the base bar, a long steel arm clamped to the protractor at its center, a brass set square or sliding square that moves along the arm, and a tri-leaved scale (like an architect’s scale) that moves along the arm or along the set square. There are four metal springs, each with its own screw. The two smaller springs hold the protractor plate to the base bar and the two larger ones hold the tri-leaved scale or the set square to the arm. The entire instrument fits in a wooden case. A sheet of instructions is pasted inside the case.
    The protractor is divided by half-degrees and marked by tens from 0° to 90° to 0° and from 90° to 0° to 90°. An attached vernier permits angle readings to one minute of arc. The ratios on the architect's scales range from 1:10 to 1:60. Each scale is divided into tenths of a unit.
    This is a modified form of the protracting trigonometer patented by Josiah Lyman of Lenox, Mass., in 1858, with reissue of the patent in 1860, and extension in 1872 (for an example of the protracting trigonometer, see MA.328738; for an architect’s rule patented by Lyman, see MA.308914). The instrument was made by Heller & Brightly of Philadelphia. According to a Heller & Brightly circular, the instrument sold with either a tri-leaved scale that was 6 inches long or one that was 12 inches long. This instrument has the 12-inch scale, and would have sold in 1878 for $30.00.
    Hobart Cutler Dickinson (1875–1949), a 1900 graduate of Williams College who obtained a master’s degree there and did further graduate work at Clark University (Ph.D. 1910), owned this object. Dickinson worked at the U.S. National Bureau of Standards from 1903 until his retirement in 1945. Dickinson was the father of Anne D. Ross, one of the donors of the instrument.
    References: "Circular of Lyman’s Trigonometer and Universal Draughting Instrument" (Philadelphia: Heller & Brightly, 1878); P.A. Kidwell, “Josiah Lyman’s Protracting Trigonometer,” Rittenhouse, 3 (November 1988): 11–14; Robert C. Miller, “A Lyman Protracting Trigonometer Made by Heller & Brightly,” Rittenhouse 3 (August 1989): 129–131.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Credit Line

    Gift of Hugh N. and Anne D. Ross

    date made

    ca 1880

    ID Number

    2009.0244.01

    accession number

    2009.0244

    catalog number

    2009.0244.01

    Object Name

    drawing instrument

    Physical Description

    steel (overall material)
    brass (overall material)
    wood (overall material)

    Measurements

    case: 5.8 cm x 88.4 cm x 18 cm; 2 5/16 in x 34 13/16 in x 7 1/16 in

    place made

    United States: Pennsylvania, Philadelphia

    See more items in

    Medicine and Science: Mathematics
    Science & Mathematics
    Trigonometry
    Protractors

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Subject

    Engineering
    Mathematics
    Protractor

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746ac-ca45-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_1376069

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