Beginnings In the 1880s
Herman Hollerith was the first to record data on a medium that could then be read by a machine. Prior uses of machine readable media had been for lists of instructions (not data) to drive
programmed machines such as
Jacquard looms and
mechanized musical instruments. "After some initial trials with paper tape, he settled on
punched cards [...]". To process these punched cards, sometimes referred to as "Hollerith cards", he invented the
keypunch, sorter, and
tabulator unit record machines. These inventions were the foundation of the data processing industry. The tabulator used electromechanical
relays to increment mechanical counters. Hollerith's method was used in the 1890 census. The company he founded in 1896, the
Tabulating Machine Company (TMC), was one of four companies that in 1911 were
amalgamated in the forming of a fifth company, the
Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company, later renamed
IBM. Following the 1900 census a permanent Census bureau was formed. The bureau's contract disputes with Hollerith led to the formation of the Census Machine Shop where
James Powers and others developed new machines for part of the 1910 census processing. Powers left the Census Bureau in 1911, with rights to patents for the machines he developed, and formed the Powers Accounting Machine Company. In 1927 Powers' company was acquired by
Remington Rand. In 1919
Fredrik Rosing Bull, after examining Hollerith's machines, began developing unit record machines for his employer. Bull's patents were sold in 1931, constituting the basis for
Groupe Bull. These companies, and others, manufactured, and marketed a variety of general-purpose unit record machines for creating, sorting, and tabulating punched cards, even after the development of computers in the 1950s. Punched card technology had quickly developed into a powerful tool for business data-processing.
Timeline • 1884: Herman Hollerith files a patent application titled "Art of Compiling Statistics"; granted on January 8, 1889. • 1886: First use of tabulating machine in Baltimore's Department of Health. • 1889: First recorded use of integrating tabulator in the Office of the Surgeon General of the Army. • 1904: Porter, having returned to England, forms
The Tabulator Limited (UK) to market Hollerith's machines. • 1905: Hollerith reincorporates the Tabulating Machine Company as
The Tabulating Machine Company • 1906: Hollerith Type 1 Tabulator, the first tabulator with an automatic card feed and control panel. • 1909: The Tabulator Limited renamed as
British Tabulating Machine Company (BTM). • 1910: Tabulators built by the Census Machine Shop print results. • 1910: Willy Heidinger, an acquaintance of Hollerith, licenses Hollerith's The Tabulating Machine Company patents, creating
Dehomag in Germany. • 1911:
Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (CTR), a
holding company, formed by the amalgamation of The Tabulating Machine Company and three other companies. • 1911: James Powers forms Powers Tabulating Machine Company, later renamed
Powers Accounting Machine Company. Powers had been employed by the Census Bureau to work on tabulating machine development and was given the right to patent his inventions there. The machines he developed sensed card punches mechanically, as opposed to Hollerith's electric sensing. • 1912: The first Powers horizontal sorting machine. • 1914: Thomas J. Watson hired by CTR. • 1914: The Tabulating Machine Company produces 2 million punched cards per day. • 1914: The first Powers printing tabulator. • 1915 Powers Tabulating Machine Company establishes European operations through the Accounting and Tabulating Machine Company of Great Britain Limited. • 1919:
Fredrik Rosing Bull, after studying Hollerith's machines, constructs a prototype 'ordering, recording and adding machine' (tabulator) of his own design. About a dozen machines were produced during the following several years for his employer. • 1920:
BTM begins manufacturing its own machines, rather than simply marketing Hollerith equipment. • 1920: The Tabulating Machine Company's first printing tabulator, the Hollerith Type 3. • 1921: Powers-Samas develops the first commercial alphabetic punched card representation. • 1922: Powers develops an alphabetic printer. • 1924:
Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company (CTR) renamed
International Business Machines (IBM). There would be no IBM-labeled products until 1933. • 1925: The Tabulating Machine Company's first horizontal card sorter, the Hollerith Type 80, processes 400 cards/min. • 1927:
Remington Typewriter Company and
Rand Kardex combine to form
Remington Rand. Within a year, Remington Rand acquires the
Powers Accounting Machine Company. The Tabulating Machine Company begins its collaboration with Benjamin Wood,
Wallace John Eckert, and the Statistical Bureau at Columbia University. • 1929 The Accounting and Tabulating Machine Company of Great Britain Limited renamed
Powers-Samas Accounting Machine Limited (Samas, full name Societe Anonyme des Machines a Statistiques, had been the Power's sales agency in France, formed in 1922). The informal reference "Acc and Tab" would persist. The Tabulator model T30 is introduced. • 1931: The Tabulating Machine Company's first punched card machine that could multiply, the
600 Multiplying Punch. Their first alphabetical accounting machine - although not a complete alphabet, the Alphabetic Tabulator Model B was quickly followed by the full alphabet ATC. The
Packard attracted users from across the country: "the Carnegie Foundation, Yale, Pittsburgh, Chicago, Ohio State, Harvard, California, and Princeton." • 1933:
Compagnie des Machines Bull is the new name of the reorganized H.W. Egli - Bull. • 1933: The Tabulating Machine Company name disappears as subsidiary companies are merged into IBM. The
Hollerith trade name is replaced by
IBM. IBM introduces removable control panels. • 1934: IBM renames its Tabulators as Electric Accounting Machines. • 1937: The first collator, the IBM 077 Collator The first use of an electronic component in an IBM product was a photocell in a Social Security bill-feed machine. • 1938: Powers-Samas multiplying punch introduced. • 1943: "IBM had about 10,000 tabulators on rental [...] 601 multipliers numbered about 2000 [...] keypunch[es] 24,500". The
IBM 603 Electronic Multiplier was introduced, "the first electronic calculator ever placed into production.". • 1948: The
IBM 604 Electronic Punch. "No other calculator of comparable size or cost could match its capability". • 1952: Bull Gamma 3 introduced. An electronic calculator with
delay-line memory, programmed by a connection panel, that was connected to a tabulator or card reader-punch. The Gamma 3 had greater capacity, greater speed, and lower rentals than competitive products. in 1964 By the 1950s punched cards and unit record machines had become ubiquitous in academia, industry, and government. The warning often printed on cards that were to be individually handled, "Do not fold, spindle or mutilate", coined by Charles A. Philips, became a motto for the post-
World War II era (even though many people had no idea what
spindle meant). With the development of computers punched cards found new uses as their principal input media. Punched cards were used not only for data, but for a new application - computer programs, see:
Computer programming in the punched card era. Unit record machines therefore remained in computer installations in a supporting role for keypunching, reproducing card decks, and printing. • 1955: IBM produces 72.5 million punched cards per day. • 1958: The "Series 50", basic accounting machines, was announced. These were modified machines, with reduced speed and/or function, offered for rental at reduced rates. The name "Series 50" relates to a similar marketing effort, the "Model 50", seen in the IBM 1940 product booklet. An alternate report identifies the modified machines as "Type 5050" introduced in 1959 and notes that Remington-Rand introduced similar products. • 1959:
BTM merges with rival Powers-Samas to form
International Computers and Tabulators (ICT). • 1959: The
IBM 1401, internally known in IBM for a time as "SPACE" ("Stored Program Accounting and Calculating Equipment") and developed in part as a response to the Bull Gamma 3, outperforms three IBM 407s and a 604, while having a much lower rental. • 1960: The IBM 609 Calculator, an improved 608 with core memory. This will be IBMs last punched card calculator. Many organizations were loath to alter systems that were working, so production unit record installations remained in operation long after computers offered faster and more cost-effective solutions. Cost or availability of equipment was another factor; for example in 1965 an
IBM 1620 computer did not have a printer as standard equipment, so it was normal in such installations to punch output onto cards and then print these cards using an
IBM 407 accounting machine. Specialized uses of punched cards such as toll collection,
microform aperture cards, and
punched card voting kept unit record equipment in use into the twenty-first century. • 1968:
International Computers and Tabulators (ICT) merges with
English Electric Computers, forming
International Computers Limited (ICL). • 1969: The IBM
System/3, renting for less than $1,000 a month, the ancestor of IBM's
midrange computer product line, aka.
minicomputers, was aimed at new customers and organizations that still used IBM 1400 series computers or unit record equipment. It featured a new, smaller punched card with a
96-column format. Instead of the rectangular punches in the classic IBM card, the new cards had tiny (1 mm), circular holes much like
paper tape. By July 1974 more than 25,000 System/3s had been installed. • 1971: The
IBM 129 Card Data Recorder (keypunch and auxiliary on-line card reader/punch) is the last, or among the last, 80-column card unit record product announcements (other than
card readers and card punches attached to computers). • 1975 Cardamation founded, a U.S. company that supplied punched card equipment and supplies until 2011.
Endings • 1976: The IBM 407 Accounting Machine was withdrawn from marketing. • 1978: IBM's Rochester plant made its last shipment of the IBM 082, 084, 085, 087, 514, and 548 machines. The System/3 was succeeded by the System/38. • 1984: The IBM 029 Card Punch, announced in 1964, was withdrawn from marketing. IBM closed its last punch card manufacturing plant. • 2010: A group from the
Computer History Museum reported that an IBM 402 Accounting Machine and related punched card equipment was still in operation at a filter manufacturing company in
Conroe, Texas. The punched card system was still in use as of 2013. • 2011: The owner of Cardamation, Robert G. Swartz, dies, and the company, perhaps the last supplier of punch card equipment, ceases operation. • 2015: Punched cards for
time clocks and some other applications were still available; one supplier was the California Tab Card Company. As of 2018, the web site was no longer in service. ==Punched cards==