Cylinder Shaving Machine, circa 1907
01
Artifact Overview
Dictaphones and Ediphones were sound recording devices largely used for oral dictation in business settings. In this scenario, wax cylinder recordings were passed to a secretary, who listened to the recording with a playback-only transcriber and then typed up notes. A shaving machine, such as this one, scraped the previously inscribed layer away allowing a wax cylinder to be reused over 100 times.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Shaving machine
Date Made
circa 1907
Creator Notes
Edison shaving machine ( created by Thomas A. Edison Inc., West Orange, NJ), powered with an Emerson motor, supplied by Emerson Electric Manufacturing Company, NY.
Location
Not on exhibit to the public.
Object ID
29.2003.62
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford. Gift of Thomas A. Edison, Inc.
Material
Brass (Alloy)
Cast iron
Ceramic (Material)
Nickel (Metal)
Leather
Steel (Alloy)
Wood (Plant material)
Dimensions
Height: 15 in
Width: 19 in
Length: 17 in
Inscriptions
front:
Edison Shaving Machine
Thomas A. Edison
Trade Mark
Plaque:
Edison Shaving Machine
patented August 8, 1905
[licensing information]
Serial No 7248
motor:
Emerson
872607
The Emerson Electric Mfg. Co.
New York
St. Louis
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