Dictaphone Dictating Machine, Model 12
01
Artifact Overview
Dictaphones and Ediphones were sound recording devices used for efficient oral dictation in business settings. When Edison invented the phonograph, one proposed use was "dictation without the aid of stenographers." Its tinfoil playback medium lacked quality, however. Alexander Graham Bell's Graphophone (later, Dictaphone) improved the phonograph by using wax cylinders for superior playback; cylinders were also used in the competing Ediphone.
Artifact Details
Artifact
Dictating machine
Creators
Location
Not on exhibit to the public.
Object ID
2017.0.34.1112
Credit
From the Collections of The Henry Ford.
Material
Metal
Color
Gray (Color)
Silver (Color)
White (Color)
Dimensions
Height: 33.75 in
Width: 18 in
Length: 13 in
Inscriptions
on front:
Dictaphone / REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. / MODEL 12
on plate:
196093
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