Keuffel and Esser

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Keuffel and Esser, Co.
Image:KE_logo.jpg
Type Corporation
Founded 1867
Headquarters New York, New Jersey
Key people William J. D. Keuffel, Herman Esser
Industry Stationery and similar
Products Slide rules, surveying instruments, drawing materials
Subsidiaries Young & Sons, purchased 1918

The Keuffel and Esser Co. (also known as K&E) was a drafting company founded in 1867 by German immigrants William J. D. Keuffel and Herman Esser.

Keuffel and Esser started out in New York and sold drawing materials and drafting supplies. In 1876, K&E (as the company was known) started selling surveying instruments. A three-story factory in Hoboken, New Jersey was completed four years later, and K&E was incorporated in 1889.

In the following decade Keuffel and Esser introduced another, new line of surveying instruments based on the work of John Paoli, an Italian immigrant in Hoboken.

K&E acquired Young & Sons in 1918 and made it a department of the firm. In the 1920s, K&E started manufacturing slide rules. However, with the advent of the electronic, transistorized calculator in the 1970s, slide rules became obsolete. Slide rules had never been very profitable for K&E, so it was not difficult to discontinue the line. K&E's market share shrank due to other technological advancements and shut down its slide rule engraving machines in 1975.[1]

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Stoll, Cliff. "When Slide Rules Ruled". Scientific American. May 2006.