Parmelee Patent Drawings
The Early Key-Driven Art
M. Le Colonel D’Ocagne, Ingénieur des Ponts et Chaussées, Professeur à l’École des Ponts et Chaussées, Répétiteur à l’École Polytechnique, in his “Le Calcul simplifie,” a historical review of calculating devices and machines, refers to the key-driven machine as having first made its appearance in the Schilt machine of 1851, but that the Art reached its truly practical form in America. In the latter part of his statement the professor is correct, but as to the first appearance of the key-driven machine the U. S. Patent Office records show that a patent was issued to D. D. Parmelee in 1850 for a key-driven adding machine ([see illustration]).
The Parmelee Machine
First attempt to use depressable keys for adding was made in America
By referring to the illustration of the [Parmelee machine] reproduced from the drawings of the patent, the reader will notice that the patentee deviated from the established principle of using numeral wheels. In place of numeral wheels a long ratchet-toothed bar has been supplied, the flat faces of which are numbered progressively from the top to the bottom.
Description of Parmelee machine
As shown in [Fig. 2] of these drawings, a spring-pressed ratchet pawl marked k, engages the teeth of the ratchet or numeral bar. The pawl k, is pivoted to a lever-constructed device marked E, the plan of which is shown in [Fig. 3]. This lever device is pivoted and operated by the keys which are provided with arms d, so arranged that when any one of the keys is depressed the arm contacts with and operates the lever device and its pawl k to ratchet the numeral bar upwards.
Another spring-pressed ratchet pawl marked m ([see Fig. 2]) is mounted on the bottom of the casing and serves to hold the numeral bar from returning after a key-depression.
It will be noted from [Fig. 1] that the keys extend through the top of the casing in progressively varying heights. This variation is such as to allow the No. 1 key to ratchet up one tooth of the numeral bar, the No. 2 key two teeth, etc., progressively. By this method a limited column of digits could be added up by depressing the keys corresponding to the digits and the answer could be read from the lowest tooth of the numeral bar that protruded through the top of the casing.