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SHAKSPER 1999: The Hinman Collator: A History and Census
From: Hardy M. Cook (editor@ws.bowiestate.edu) Date: 04/05/99
The Shakespeare Conference: SHK 10.0611 Monday, 5 April 1999. From: Steven Smith <Ssmith@lib-gw.tamu.edu> Date: Wednesday, 31 Mar 1999 11:45:25 -0600 Subject: The Hinman Collator: A History and Census Dear List Members, I am appealing to the list for help with my census and history of the Hinman Collator. The Hinman Collating Machine is an optical instrument designed for making detailed comparisons of printed texts from within the same edition or press run. The purpose of these comparisons is to find variants within the texts. The machine, which in its final form stood just under six feet tall, five feet long, and weighed 450 lbs, was invented by Charlton Hinman in the late 1940's. Its most famous use was made by Dr. Hinman and resulted in his Printing and Proofreading of the First Folio of Shakespeare (OUP, 1963) and The First Folio of Shakespeare (Norton, 1968). Because of the tremendous impact the machine has had on Shakespeare studies, I thought this list would be an appropriate forum for my appeal. I believe there were about 55 or so of these machines manufactured from the early 1950s to the late 1970s. They were purchased, for the most part, by libraries, museums, and university English Departments. The last census (published in the PBSA in 1969) listed 28 machines. I have added 16 to the list for a total of 44. A brief list, arranged by location, is attached below. I would be very interested to hear if I have overlooked any locations. I have found a few machines in England, Germany, and Canada, but most are located inside the United States. If I have overlooked any machines they are probably in locations outside the United States, and so I would be especially interested to hear from list members who can help or provide leads for non-U.S. locations. I am reasonably confident that no Hinman ever made it to France, the Netherlands, Australia, or New Zealand, but that still leaves a big chunk of the world to cover. I have reason to believe that one or two machines may have made their way to Japan, so I would be doubly interested to hear from anyone who could help with this country. Since I am also writing a history of the Hinman, I would also be interested in hearing from anyone who has extensively used one of these machines or had any dealings with the manufacturer or was at a particular library when a particular machine showed up or has had any experience whatsoever relating to the Hinman. The list below is arranged, in deference to the 1969 census, by state and then by country for locations outside the U.S. Asterisks identify locations I am still attempting to confirm. Offlist replies would probably be preferable. Thanks in advance for any help you can offer. Steven E. Smith Associate Professor, Special Collections Librarian Cushing Memorial Library Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843-5000 (409) 845 1951 FAX (409) 845 1441 THE LIST CALIFORNIA 1. Oakland, privately owned (previously owned by the Folger Shakespeare Library) 2. University of California, Davis. 3. University of California, Los Angeles, Clark Library. COLORADO 4. University of Colorado at Boulder CONNECTICUT 5. Yale University* DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 6. Central Intelligence Agency* Folger Shakespeare Library (see under Oakland, California) 7. Folger Shakespeare Library 8. Library of Congress* FLORIDA 9. University of Florida, Smathers Library East, Rare Books and Special Collections, Gainesville GEORGIA 10. Athens, privately owned (previously owned, in the following order, by University of South Carolina, Institute for Southern Studies; McMaster University; and the Williamsburg Imprint Project) ILLINOIS 11. University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign 12. Northern Illinois University, Dekalb 13. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. 14. Newberry Library, Chicago INDIANA 15. Indiana University, Bloomington IOWA 16. University of Iowa, Iowa City KANSAS 17. University of Kansas, Spencer Research Library, Lawrence MASSACHUSETTS 18. Harvard University 19. American Antiquarian Society, Worcester. MINNESOTA 20. Minneapolis, privately owned (past president of General Mills)* NORTH CAROLINA 21. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill NEW YORK 22. Cornell University. 23. New York Public Library (deaccessioned) OHIO 24. Kent State University, Kent* 25. Ohio State University, Columbus Miami University, see under Charlottesville, Virginia PENNSYLVANIA 26. Lessing Rosenwald, Jenkintown* 27. Penn State, University Park RHODE ISLAND 28. Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island* SOUTH CAROLINA 29. University of South Carolina University of South Carolina, Institute for Southern Studies (see under Athens, Georgia) TEXAS 30. University of Texas, Austin, HRHRC. 31. Texas Tech University 32. Texas A&M University 33. University of Houston VIRGINIA 34. University of Virginia, Charlottesville 35. Charlottesville, privately owned (previously owned by Miami University) Colonial Williamsburg, Williamsburg Imprint Project (see under Athens, Georgia) WISCONSIN 36. University of Wisconsin, Madison 37. University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee* CANADA 38. Rare Book Division, National Library of Canada McMaster University (see under Athens, Georgia) UNITED KINGDOM 39. British Museum, London (deaccessioned) 40. Oxford University, Oxford 41. Cambridge University 42. University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh GERMANY 43. Institutum Erasmianum, Westfaelische Wilhelms-Universitaet, Muenster 44. Herzog August Bibliothek, Wolfenbuettel
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