2008 10c American Clock

# 3763 - 2008 10c American Clock

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328964
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U.S. #3763
10¢ American Clock
American Design
 
Issue Date: July 15, 2008
City: Washington, D.C.
Quantity:
 100,000,000
Printed By: American Packaging Corp. for Sennett Security Products
Printing Method:
Offset Lithography
Perforations:
9 ¾ Vertically
Color: Green, yellow, and black
The self-adhesive American Clock stamp is the second issue of the American Design Series that began with the 2002 American Toleware coil stamp. It replaced the 10¢ Red Cloud stamps of 1987-94. The design is from a clock made about 1805 by Simon Willard of Massachusetts.
 
Using simple hand tools, the early American clockmakers created masterpieces that kept time with precision.  After crafting the mechanism, clockmakers frequently commissioned cabinetmakers to make cases to conceal the pendulum and weights.  The result was a functional yet beautiful piece of furniture.
 
Simon Willard (1753-1848) was a noteworthy American clockmaker.  He established a workshop in 1780, was given complete responsibility for the clocks at Harvard University, and contributed elegant timepieces for the U.S. Senate and Supreme Court.
 
Willard developed a compact wall timepiece known as the “banjo clock.”  Unlike other clocks, the design omits the striking mechanism and indicates time only by its hands and dial.  Although Willard was granted a patent for his invention in 1802, many others imitated his design. 
 
Banjo clocks feature a round opening with a painted dial.  A long-waisted wooden case and a rectangular box with a hinged door, each with decorative glass panels, surround the pendulum.  A cast iron eagle (finial) tops most banjo clocks.  Only 4,000 authentic Willard banjo clocks are known.

Birth of Ottmar Mergenthaler

1996 Ottmar Mergenthaler stamp
US #3062 – from the 1996 Pioneers of Communication issue

Inventor Ottmar Mergenthaler was born on May 11, 1854, in Hatchel, Kingdom of Württemberg (in present-day Germany).  Mergenthaler invented the Linotype, a machine which made it quicker and easier to set complete lines of type for printing presses, revolutionizing printing in the 19th century.

2008 American clock stamp
US #3763 – Mergenthaler got his start as a watchmaker’s apprentice.

Mergenthaler’s father was a schoolteacher and received little formal education after primary school.  Yet he was a very bright child – his siblings called him “whiz kid.”  When he was 13, he fixed a church clock that had been deemed unfixable by local watchmakers.  The following year, Mergenthaler began an apprenticeship with a watchmaker (who was also his step-uncle).  He was a quick learner and well-disciplined, able to draft technical drawings and patent applications.  In fact, he so impressed his step-uncle, that he began paying him a year before his apprenticeship ended, which he had never done before.

In 1872, Mergenthaler was part of a wave of German immigrants that relocated to America.  He secured a job in his step-cousin’s electronic equipment workshop, though he had no previous experience with it.  He was a fast learner, however, and within two years rose to the rank of a manager.  Mergenthaler became a US citizen in 1878 and his step cousin’s business partner in 1881, after the company was moved to Baltimore.

1996 Mergenthaler Mystic First Day Cover
US #3062 – Mystic First Day Cover

Mergenthaler then opened his own workshop in 1883.  A few years earlier he had become interested in the printing industry.  At the time, the printing process was slow and inefficient, and many sought a way to improve on this.  Mergenthaler began creating a mechanical means for setting printing type, which would eliminate the time-consuming chore of setting it by hand.

1977 Book and Eyeglasses stamp
US #1585 – Mergenthaler’s invention revolutionized the printing of newspapers, books, and magazines.

Mergenthaler accomplished this task by inventing the Linotype, a keyboard-operated machine that assembled metal molds of letters to create entire lines of text in a single unit.  When a line was completed, the operator pressed a key which sent it to be cast in molten metal, usually lead.  When the metal cooled, it formed a line of type with raised letters called a slug.  Both the slug and the molds were automatically sorted by mechanical means.  After it was used for printing, a slug was melted down and used again.  He patented his machine in 1884 and the following year he was honored at a special event promoting his invention.  Among the guests was President Chester A. Arthur.

2013 Linotype Operator stamp
US #4801e – Linotype operator stamp from the 2013 Made in America sheet.

The first 12 Linotype machines were installed at the New York Tribune in 1886.  Linotypes quickly spread throughout the industry, reducing printing costs greatly, and lowering consumer prices for newspapers, books, and magazines.  Mergenthaler’s machine was featured on the cover of Scientific American and by 1889, patent rights for it had been sold in Great Britain and Ireland.

Mergenthaler continuously re-worked and improve on his machine.  Reportedly, Thomas Edison called his Simplex Linotype machine “The Eighth Wonder of the World.”  By the mid-1890s, Mergenthaler’s health began to decline, suffering from tuberculosis.  He moved to New Mexico and worked on his autobiography, before dying on October 28, 1899.  Mergenthaler’s company continued after his death until it was taken over by a German firm in 1987.

1996 Mergenthaler Fleetwood First Day Cover

US #3062 – Fleetwood First Day Cover 

Read More - Click Here

 

U.S. #3763
10¢ American Clock
American Design
 
Issue Date: July 15, 2008
City: Washington, D.C.
Quantity:
 100,000,000
Printed By: American Packaging Corp. for Sennett Security Products
Printing Method:
Offset Lithography
Perforations:
9 ¾ Vertically
Color: Green, yellow, and black
The self-adhesive American Clock stamp is the second issue of the American Design Series that began with the 2002 American Toleware coil stamp. It replaced the 10¢ Red Cloud stamps of 1987-94. The design is from a clock made about 1805 by Simon Willard of Massachusetts.
 
Using simple hand tools, the early American clockmakers created masterpieces that kept time with precision.  After crafting the mechanism, clockmakers frequently commissioned cabinetmakers to make cases to conceal the pendulum and weights.  The result was a functional yet beautiful piece of furniture.
 
Simon Willard (1753-1848) was a noteworthy American clockmaker.  He established a workshop in 1780, was given complete responsibility for the clocks at Harvard University, and contributed elegant timepieces for the U.S. Senate and Supreme Court.
 
Willard developed a compact wall timepiece known as the “banjo clock.”  Unlike other clocks, the design omits the striking mechanism and indicates time only by its hands and dial.  Although Willard was granted a patent for his invention in 1802, many others imitated his design. 
 
Banjo clocks feature a round opening with a painted dial.  A long-waisted wooden case and a rectangular box with a hinged door, each with decorative glass panels, surround the pendulum.  A cast iron eagle (finial) tops most banjo clocks.  Only 4,000 authentic Willard banjo clocks are known.

Birth of Ottmar Mergenthaler

1996 Ottmar Mergenthaler stamp
US #3062 – from the 1996 Pioneers of Communication issue

Inventor Ottmar Mergenthaler was born on May 11, 1854, in Hatchel, Kingdom of Württemberg (in present-day Germany).  Mergenthaler invented the Linotype, a machine which made it quicker and easier to set complete lines of type for printing presses, revolutionizing printing in the 19th century.

2008 American clock stamp
US #3763 – Mergenthaler got his start as a watchmaker’s apprentice.

Mergenthaler’s father was a schoolteacher and received little formal education after primary school.  Yet he was a very bright child – his siblings called him “whiz kid.”  When he was 13, he fixed a church clock that had been deemed unfixable by local watchmakers.  The following year, Mergenthaler began an apprenticeship with a watchmaker (who was also his step-uncle).  He was a quick learner and well-disciplined, able to draft technical drawings and patent applications.  In fact, he so impressed his step-uncle, that he began paying him a year before his apprenticeship ended, which he had never done before.

In 1872, Mergenthaler was part of a wave of German immigrants that relocated to America.  He secured a job in his step-cousin’s electronic equipment workshop, though he had no previous experience with it.  He was a fast learner, however, and within two years rose to the rank of a manager.  Mergenthaler became a US citizen in 1878 and his step cousin’s business partner in 1881, after the company was moved to Baltimore.

1996 Mergenthaler Mystic First Day Cover
US #3062 – Mystic First Day Cover

Mergenthaler then opened his own workshop in 1883.  A few years earlier he had become interested in the printing industry.  At the time, the printing process was slow and inefficient, and many sought a way to improve on this.  Mergenthaler began creating a mechanical means for setting printing type, which would eliminate the time-consuming chore of setting it by hand.

1977 Book and Eyeglasses stamp
US #1585 – Mergenthaler’s invention revolutionized the printing of newspapers, books, and magazines.

Mergenthaler accomplished this task by inventing the Linotype, a keyboard-operated machine that assembled metal molds of letters to create entire lines of text in a single unit.  When a line was completed, the operator pressed a key which sent it to be cast in molten metal, usually lead.  When the metal cooled, it formed a line of type with raised letters called a slug.  Both the slug and the molds were automatically sorted by mechanical means.  After it was used for printing, a slug was melted down and used again.  He patented his machine in 1884 and the following year he was honored at a special event promoting his invention.  Among the guests was President Chester A. Arthur.

2013 Linotype Operator stamp
US #4801e – Linotype operator stamp from the 2013 Made in America sheet.

The first 12 Linotype machines were installed at the New York Tribune in 1886.  Linotypes quickly spread throughout the industry, reducing printing costs greatly, and lowering consumer prices for newspapers, books, and magazines.  Mergenthaler’s machine was featured on the cover of Scientific American and by 1889, patent rights for it had been sold in Great Britain and Ireland.

Mergenthaler continuously re-worked and improve on his machine.  Reportedly, Thomas Edison called his Simplex Linotype machine “The Eighth Wonder of the World.”  By the mid-1890s, Mergenthaler’s health began to decline, suffering from tuberculosis.  He moved to New Mexico and worked on his autobiography, before dying on October 28, 1899.  Mergenthaler’s company continued after his death until it was taken over by a German firm in 1987.

1996 Mergenthaler Fleetwood First Day Cover

US #3062 – Fleetwood First Day Cover