Herman Hollerith was a Columbia graduate and later received a Columbia
PhD for his 1890 census work.
Photo: IBM.
The image shows
Herman Hollerith's 1890 tabulating machine (image from IBM;
CLICK
HERE for a color photo). The results of a tabulation are displayed on
the clock-like dials. A sorter is on the right. On the tabletop below the
dials are a Pantographic card punch (explained below) on left and the card
reading station ("press") on the right, in which metal pins pass through the
holes, making contact with little wells of mercury, completing an electrical
circuit. All of these
devices are fed manually, one card at a time, but the tabulator and sorter
are electrically coupled.
Left to right: The circuit-closing press ("card reader"); diagram of press;
hand insertion of card into a sorter compartment that opened automatically
based on the values punched into the card; tallying the day's results.
"Each completed circuit caused an electromagnet to advance a counting dial
by one number. The tabulator's 40 dials allowed the answers to several
questions to be counted simultaneously. At the end of the day, the total on
each dial was recorded by hand and the dial set back to
zero [103]."
Herman Hollerith at tabulator (1894) - click to enlarge
This apparatus works unerringly as the mills of the gods, but beats
them hollow as to speed.
–The Electrical Engineer,
11 Nov 1891.
The 1890 tabulator was capable only of counting.
Subsequent models, developed by Hollerith
himself, were also able to add, thus broadening their scope to accounting,
warehousing, and shipping applications. Between 1902 and 1905, Hollerith
also developed an automatic card feed and a method for reading cards in
motion and settled on a standard card format. In 1928, IBM produced its
first tabulator (the Type IV) with both addition and subtraction capability.
Photo:
(from the 1920 census): [44].
Tabulating the 1890 census; Image: Scientific American
Left: The Pantographic card punch in operation. The operator holds
the stylus over the template. The card is in the punch station above the
template. Right: After the cards are punched, they are fed into the
Hollerith tabulators.
Above: A punch-card template from a Pantographic punch used the 1890 US census
(image: US Library of Congress). Notice there are 12 rows (as in modern punch
cards), of which only the bottom 10 were used, and only 20 columns; the curved
shape is due to the Pantographic mechanism, an early ergonomic device allowing
operators to punch 500 cards per day with good accuracy and minimal physical
strain (compared to the handheld "train conductor" punches used in previous
trials, which could cause near paralysis with prolonged use -- carpal tunnel
syndrome did not start with PCs! -- and with which
correct placement of holes was problematic). The Pantographic punch operator
positioned a stylus over the desired hole in the template and pressed it to
punch a hole in the corresponding position of the rectangular card. The
template has areas marked off for various demographic categories.
Above: The "reading board" for a punched card from the 1890 census (the
cards themselves were blank; this is like the "decoder ring" for the holes,
which itself needs a second "decoder ring" to decipher the alphanumeric
codes). Cards had one one corner cut diagonally to protect against upside
down and/or backwards cards that might not otherwise be detected and the
reading board had the same cut for obvious reasons (image from
[69]). The card measures 3.25 by 7.375
inches, the same size as the 1887 US paper currency because Hollerith used
Treasury Department containers as card boxes (pictures not actual size, but
all to the same scale):
United States ten dollar bill 1901
US banknotes were reduced in size by 20% to their present dimensions in 1928:
United States ten dollar bill 1928
Using round holes, the card column density eventually reached 45 prior to
the 1928 80-column rectangular-punch standard. Here is the modern (or at
least, final) standard, corner-cut, 80-column general-purpose IBM punch
card, introduced in 1928, and popularly known as the "IBM card":
80-column IBM punch card, 1928 and later - click image to enlarge
Holes in the 80-column card are rectangular, rather than round as in earlier
models. The bottom ten rows are labeled with digits; the top two rows are
unlabeled and are used in an alphanumeric character code first standardized
(by IBM) in 1931 as BCDIC, a 40-character set that included digits,
uppercase A-Z, space, minus sign, asterisk, and ampersand
[52], eventually expanded to a large
family of 256-character Extended BCDIC (EBCDIC) codes, IBM's Country
Extended Code Pages.
This type of card was a mainstay of data processing and computing from 1928
through the 1980s and was still in use in voting machines through the 2000
USA presidential election, in which they were discredited when the number of
swing ballots might have been less than the number questionably-punched
cards and therefore contested ballots (we'll never know, since they weren't
counted).
Although the poorly punched cards were due primarily to unmaintained
machines (many of them more than 40 years old), most localities resolved to
replace punched-card technology with something more modern, like optical
scanners. Whether the new technology is more reliable, accurate, cost
effective, durable, and resistent to fraud and tampering is a concern,
but there is apparently no going back.
Truesdell, Leon E., The Development of Punch Card Tabulation
in the Bureau of the Census 1890-1940,
US Government Printing Office, Washington DC (1965).
Destruction
of the 1890 Census, Newspapers.com, accessed 20 October 2019. The story
of how the 1890 records (including forms and cards) were destroyed in
1932, before the National Archive was established.
The Punched Card Tabulator, IBM 100: "Herman Hollerith's first
tabulating machines opened the world's eyes to the very idea of data
processing. Along the way, the machines also laid the foundation for IBM..."