UK's 'last typewriter' produced
The BBC's Colin Paterson was there to witness the end of an era
A typewriter, which its makers say is the last to be built in the UK, has been produced at a north Wales factory.
Manufacturer Brother, which says it has made 5.9 million typewriters since its factory in Wrexham opened in 1985, has donated the last machine to London's Science Museum.
The museum said the piece represented the end of a technology which had been "important to so many lives".
Edward Bryan, a worker at the factory since 1989, made the last typewriter.
"If people ever ask me, I can always say now, as a strange question, that I've made the last typewriter in the UK," he told BBC Breakfast's Colin Paterson.
He said he had previously "tried and succeeded to make one with my eyes closed".
'Special place'Brother said it had stopped making typewriters in the UK because demand had fallen sharply in this country. It said that it still had significant sales in the US but its factory in the Far East produces enough typewriters to serve this market.
The company will continue to use the factory to run a recycling scheme for printer cartridges as well as to make other office technology.
UK boss Phil Jones said the typewriter still held "a special place in the hearts" of members of the public.
"Because of this, and the typewriter's importance in the history of business communication, we felt that giving it a home at the Science Museum would be a fitting tribute," he said.
Typewriters were first mass produced by the Remington company in the 1870s
The Science Museum's assistant curator of technologies and engineering, Rachel Boon, said staff were excited to add the item "to our rich collection of typewriters" which numbers more than 200.
"This object represents the end of typewriter manufacture in the UK, a technology which has developed over the last 130 years and has been important to so many lives," she said.
"This model will enable us to tell the story of how technology has evolved in accordance with our communication needs."
The first known typewriter was invented in the US in 1830 by William Burt.
But typewriters did not become a commercial success until the 1870s when inventors Christopher Sholes - who also invented the Qwerty keyboard - and Carlos Glidden made a deal with the Remington company to mass produce their machines.
The typewriter is widely regarded as being instrumental in helping many women to enter paid work for the first time.
Typing classes became popular in the late 19th Century, and by 1901 there were 166,000 female clerks in Britain - up from 2,000 half a century before.



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Comment number 78.
Megan20th November 2012 - 14:57
I learned to touch-type on an old German manual typewriter that my father, er, stole during WW2... and now, rather a long time and a computing career later, now regard touch-typing as a lifeline - following a stroke I can no longer write longhand but the one thing I can do with that dud hand is touch-type so I can still communicate and work :)
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Comment number 33.
whowrotethis20th November 2012 - 11:48
Ah, I remember taking typing classes at school on clunky manual machines with sticking keys and a flick of the hand for a carriage return. I am glad I learnt to type, I am doing it now, but do I hanker after a typewriter, er no, I just wish my printer stopped getting paper jams or running out of ink at a critical moment.
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Comment number 32.
NonLondonView20th November 2012 - 11:42
I'm just amazed they were still being made at all! They have been obsolete for ten years or more.
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Comment number 27.
David H Parry20th November 2012 - 11:20
Sad but we also stopped making horse-drawn fire engines, steam agricultural traction engines, muskets and flint-tipped spears too... I think it's called 'progress'!
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