A Brief History of The Morkrum Company
Howard L. Krum
circa 1925
(Document Notes)
Abstract
This is a first-hand report of Teletype's early years. Although
the original manuscript was found unsigned and undated, it has been
positively identified as the work of Mr. Howard L. Krum, son of
Mr. Charles L. Krum, a co-founder of the original Morkrum Company.
The date of writing seems to have been somewhere between 1925 and
1928.
The fame of Howard Krum does not depend on his illustrious
parentage. His own contributions to the printing telegraph art, among
them the invention of "stop-start synchronization," were of lasting
importance.
In the year 1902, Mr. Joy Morton, nationally known as the founder
and head of the Morton Salt Company, became interested in the possibil-
ity of developing a printing telegraph system. He called Mr. Charles
L. Krum, who was at that time Mechanical Engineer of the Western
Cold Storage Company, into consultation on the matter. While cold
storage seems rather a far cry from printing telegraph development,
Mr. Krum had had considerable experience on the design of intricate
mechanisms, including adding machines.
Inventors had been working on the development of printing telegraph
for forty years prior to this time but had not succeeded in producing
apparatus which was simple and practical enough to find any market or
any considerable use by the communication systems in the United States.
As is the case with most others who started work on printing telegraph,
Mr. Krum was fascinated with the possibilities of this development, and
Mr. Morton agreed to go ahead with the proposition and finance it. how
important this decision was did not become apparent for many years, as
certainly no one realized the vast sums of money and the years of hard
work which would have to be expended before satisfactory printing telegraph
apparatus would be produced and widespread use made of it.
In 1906, Mr. Howard Krum received his degree in electrical
engineering and immediately started work with his father on this problem.
The combination of the electrical engineer and the mechanical engineer
proved to be a happy one and experiments were diligently prosecuted for a
couple of years, until in 1908 a system was developed which looked good
enough to try on an actual telegraph line. The first trial of this system
was made on the lines of the Chicago & Alton Railroad. While operation
was secured and the results were sufficiently satisfactory to cause the
inventors to feel quite jubilant, still they were hard-headed enough to
see the weak points of this system in the state of development in which
it was at that time. The experience acquired in this actual line test of
the apparatus was made the basis for further research, and after two
more years of work, the start-stop printing telegraph system which has
become the basis for all successful single channel printer systems of the
present day, was born. The apparatus which embodied the start-stop
system at that time bore little resemblance to the present apparatus
but the principles of operation were there and the working out of them was
sufficiently satisfactory to justify a commercial installation.
In their pursuit of a satisfactory system of transmission, the
mechanism for recording the signals was not neglected. Several different
kinds of commercial typewriters were modified to perform the duty of
recording the received signals, but strange as it may seem, it was found
that commercial typewriters were not satisfactory for the rigorous job
of recording telegraph signals. It was therefore found necessary to
design a typewriter especially for this work.
These first tests also pointed out the advantages and superiority
of mechanical over electrical operation, with a result that all functions
outside of the bare selection are now performed mechanically by the
Teletype in its present form.
Having finally produced a system and apparatus which they felt
certain was commercially practical, the inventors were then faced with
the necessity for finding a communication company who would permit
the installation of this apparatus in regular commercial operation. The
Postal Telegraph Company proved to be the most receptive and a commit-
tee headed by Mr. Minor M. Davis, at that time Electrical Engineer for
the Postal Telegraph Company, visited Chicago to investigate this new
Morkrum system. It is interesting to note that Mr. Davis, who had years
of experience in the telegraph business and who had seen many attempts at
the development of a successful printing telegraph system, was not so
much concerned in the actual functioning of the recording apparatus but was
more concerned in learning if the basis of the system, that is, the line
signal, was of a type which would function on ordinary telegraph lines in
good weather and bad. After a thorough investigation of the system, he
became convinced that the start-stop line signal devised by the Krums
would meet the rigorous service requirements, and the committee decided
to permit an actual commercial installation on the Postal lines between
New York and Boston. This installation was made in the summer of 1910.
After years of work, the inventors felt that they had finally reached
their goal. The apparatus was packed and shipped and Mr. Howard Krum
went to Boston to supervise the installation at that end of the circuit and
Mr. Charles Krum went to New York to take care of the operations at
that end. However, the difficulties were not yet over, for when the
apparatus arrived at its destination it was found that due to rough
handling the delicate instruments were so badly damaged that instead
of proceeding with the installation they had to spend months of work to
get the machines back in shape for operation. Finally the day came
when everything was in readiness and the two sets, one at New York
and one at Boston, were hooked together by a telegraph wire and the
first commercial message was transmitted by the Morkrum system.
From the start good results were obtained, but as operation
continued the inventors realized more and more that the operating
requirements for commercial telegraph service were terribly exacting.
The percentage of accuracy required was much higher than with any
other form of mechanism; it must work twenty-four hours a day; it
must operate on good telegraph wires and on telegraph wires whose
quality was impaired by rain and other adverse weather conditions. The
apparatus was too delicate to function over long periods of time without
the necessity of close supervision. However, as in the case of the
earlier installation, the inventors profited by their experience and went
steadily along perfecting their apparatus, making changes here and there
to improve its accuracy [and] to make it sturdier and simpler. Further Postal
telegraph lines were equipped and an installation was made on the Chicago,
Burlington & Quincy Railroad between Chicago and Galesburg, Illinois.
However, in spite of the fact that these circuits gave good service, the
growth of the business was very slow. Telegraph companies and the
railroads seemed loath to adopt the new system. Possibly this slow
growth in the early days of the Morkrum system was due to the fact that
the telegraph companies and the railroads could easily secure good Morse
operators at low wages. Therefore, they were loath to abandon Morse
operation, concerning which they were thoroughly familiar, and to replace
it with machine telegraphy which would force them to go to school all over
again.
However, the telegraph business continued to grow and good Morse
operators became harder to secure, wages increased, and above all, the
Morkrum system steadily improved and finally installations of the system
were made by the Western union Telegraph Company, by the Canadian
Pacific and Great Northwestern Telegraph companies in Canada, and due
to increased business, Morkrum Company were able to enlarge their plant
facilities, to engage expert assistants and to steadily improve their product.
In 1917, Mr. Sterling Morton, son of Mr. Joy Morton, who had had
wide experience with the Morton Salt Company, became president of the
Morkrum Company. Mr. Morton brought to the Morkrum Company not
only his great organizing and executive ability, but also an unusual talent
for machine design work. The page printer and the Simplex tape printer,
which are the most widely used units at the present time, are the joint
work of Mr. Morton and Mr. Howard Krum.
Up to this time, the laboratory and manufacturing work had been
carried on in an old building near the business district. A careful survey
of the employees showed that the majority of them lived on the north side
of Chicago and this study determined the location of the present factory.
In 1918, the factory was moved to the first unit of the present building,
which is entirely fireproof and is considered one of the finest factory
buildings in Chicago. Since that time, a total of six units have been
built and a seventh is just being started. [1]
As the demand for printing telegraph apparatus grew, the standards
were steadily raised and apparatus which was thought quite wonderful
a few years previous became obsolete and was replaced with newer types
having greater margins of operation, higher speeds, and which were
much simpler to maintain. Installations were made in new fields and
each new field offered new and more difficult problems.
In 1914, Mr. Kent Cooper, who was then head of the Traffic
Department of the Associated Press, became convinced that the method
of delivering copy to the New York newspapers by messenger boy was
decidedly unsatisfactory and asked the Morkrum Company if they could
make an installation of their apparatus by which one operator in the
Associated Press could transmit the press matter simultaneously to all
of the newspapers in new York City. A simple problem in the light of
our present-day knowledge, but at that time it was an undertaking which
offered many problems as yet unsolved. However, it was undertaken;
the problem was studied, suitable apparatus was designed and within
a year all of the newspapers in New York City and nearby towns, as
well as in Philadelphia, were receiving their press matter simultane-
ously from a transmitting set controlled by a single operator in the
Associated Press office in New York City. From this small beginning
in the service of the Associated Press, the use of printing telegraphs
has spread until over 800 newspapers belonging to the Associated Press
receive their news dispatches by these machines, and some of the wire
circuits of which this matter is transmitted involve as much as 4,000
miles of wire. The other press associations are using the apparatus to
much the same extent.
Up to 1917, the Morkrum Company had devoted all their efforts
to the design of single channel printing telegraph systems and had
developed both direct keyboard and tape transmission, but at this time
the Postal Telegraph Company asked the Morkrum Company to develop
a Multiplex system to meet the requirements on their heavy trunk lines.
This development was undertaken and in less than a year a satisfactory
Multiplex system had been designed, manufactured and installed on the
Postal Company's line and proved so valuable that its use was extended
to all their main trunk lines.
As the use of printing telegraph became more general, needs
developed for different types of apparatus to meet different classes of
service, and the Morkrum Company attacked these problems and devel-
oped different types of apparatus until at present there are available both
direct keyboard and perforated tape transmission systems, printing
either on tape printers or page printers, operated either single channel
or Multiplex, using either five-unit or six-unit code, the latter being
especially valuable for stock quotation work.
The use of the apparatus in the telegraph companies continued
to grow until at the present time fully 80% of all commercial telegrams
are handled by printing telegraph. As the use of the machines grew,
the requirements became more and more rigid and these were met by
intensive research and development work which has never ceased.
Printers are operating today under service conditions which would not
have been considered possible even two or three years back. The
latest development, the so-called "Typebar Tape Teletype" has proven
so simple and reliable that it bids fair to drive Morse operation even
from the way wires.
Always on the alert for new fields for its equipment, the Morkrum
Company several years ago became convinced that its apparatus could
render valuable service for the communication needs of business houses,
factories, hotels, etc. To sell this idea required a lot of time and much
hard work, and the first few installations proved that this service was
much more exacting than the use of the machines in regular telegraph
offices where expert maintenance was instantly available. The experi-
ence gained in these early commercial installations paid big dividends,
in that it resulted in such marked improvement in the apparatus that the
use has grown so that today there is scarcely a city or town in the
United States where this apparatus is not used for some communication
need outside of its primary field - that of telegraphic message traffic.
The development of an organization that could satisfactorily
handle the complex problems of developing and manufacturing a printing
telegraph system has been quite as remarkable as the development of
the apparatus itself; in fact, the successful culmination of the work
would not have been possible had it not been for the splendid loyalty and
intelligent work of the whole organization. This is particularly true in
the case of the many men who had courage enough to stick to the propo-
sition through the many years that it took before practical commercial
results were obtained. The Morkrum Company are particularly proud
of the fact that the outstanding men in the organization have developed in
their own organization. It is a fixed policy of the company to develop
its own men for important positions wherever possible.
Mr. Howard Krum met Mr. J. O. Carr, who is now head of the Sales
Engineering Department, in Boston in 1910 and engaged him for testing
and engineering work. About the same time, Mr. G. Heding, who is
now Factory Manager, came to the company as a tool maker. During
their long years of service these two men have filled practically every
position of importance in the organization and much credit is due them
for their part in the final success of the work. We believe there are
few companies where such a large proportion of the men in supervisory
positions have grown up with the company and developed as the company
has developed and there are certainly few companies where there is a
greater spirit of loyalty and co-operation.
Just a word about the manufacture of this apparatus. The
requirements which printing telegraph apparatus must meet are extremely
severe. This is readily understood when it seen that when a printer
is operating at the rate of 60 words per minute it is printing six charac-
ters per second. The printing of a character requires at least four
successive operations of the various portions of the machine; in other
words, many of these mechanisms have less than a twenty-fourth of a
second in which to do their job. Coupled with this is the fact that the
control of this rapidly moving mechanism is by means of a current of
electricity so weak that it would hardly cause the smallest electric light
globe to even glow.
Knowing this, it is easy to understand that continuous work and
research must be carried on to secure proper alloys and devise the
proper methods of heat treating and hardening to permit all of the parts
of the machine to function properly.
Another requirement which is successfully met by Morkrum
apparatus is absolute interchangeability of parts. This has been secured
by the work of a force of highly trained designers and engineers and by
the policy of the company of unhesitatingly securing the finest machine
tool equipment available to permit parts to be made with the highest degree
of accuracy. The present plant of the Morkrum-Kleinschmidt Corporation [2]
at Chicago contains about 135,000 square feet of floor space devoted
solely to the manufacture of this type of apparatus, filled wit the best
machine tool equipment that can be purchased and manned by a force
of highly trained employees, many of whom have been in the service
of the company for a great many years.
Document Notes
Notes by Jim Haynes:
[1] This would be the building at 1400 Wrightwood Ave., which was
occupied by Teletype until early in the 1960s, when the R&D portion
of the complex at 5555 Touhy Ave., Skokie, was completed. I hear it
has now been remodeled into luxury apartments.
[2] E. E. Kleinschmidt had a competing printing telegraph company
in the 1905-1920 time frame. His company eventually merged with the Morkrum
company because of the dominance of the Krum patent on start-stop
operation. In the 1950s Mr. Kleinschmidt got back into the business with
his own company, located in Deerfield, IL.
This document was formatted by
Gil Smith, July 2001.
The original file,
krum--morkrum-history.txt, is courtesy of Jim Haynes.