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Home » Remington » 7 » 1905 #176,181
1905 Remington 7 Serial # 176,181 1905 Remington 7 typewriter, Serial # 176,181 Stephen Clancy's 1905 Remington 7 typewriter. 2021-10-22 From the Virtual Typewriter Collection of Stephen Clancy: 1905 Remington 7 Serial # 176,181 Nice Standard No.7 that is fully operational. The ribbon, while definitely showing it's age, still has a little life left in it. It was missing the bell when it came to me, but fortunately, another collector was able to provide one.

1905 Remington 7 #176,181

Status: My Collection
Hunter: Stephen Clancy (navyldolcdr)
Created: 10-22-2021 at 09:48AM
Last Edit: 10-22-2021 at 10:04AM


Description:

Nice Standard No.7 that is fully operational. The ribbon, while definitely showing it's age, still has a little life left in it. It was missing the bell when it came to me, but fortunately, another collector was able to provide one.

Typeface Specimen:

Photos:

Front
Front

Right front and side
Right front and side

Left rear and side
Left rear and side

Right rear and side
Right rear and side

Rear
Rear

Serial Number 176,181
Serial Number 176,181

Top
Top

Top in read position showing ribbon
Top in read position showing ribbon

Keyboard
Keyboard

Manufacturer decals on front bar
Manufacturer decals on front bar

Partial keyboard with decals
Partial keyboard with decals

Hunter: Stephen Clancy (navyldolcdr)

Stephen Clancy's Typewriter Galleries [ My Collection ] [ My Sightings ]

Status: Typewriter Hunter
Points: 1436

Retired in June of 2015 and relocated from IL to NC (no more snow and cold but unfortunately, no more Portillo's Chicago dogs either). Missed my old manual typewriter and went on the hunt for a replacement. My first find was a 1920 Royal Model 10 (second design with the dual side glass) . Have always been very fond of typewriters, from the old portable that my mother used, to my first typing class in 1967, then on into the Navy where, as a Communications Yeoman, I worked on the AN/UGC-6 with the 28 ASR (automatic send receive) teletype machine as well as the IBM card punch machines in use at the time. I guess you can say that from 1967 onward, I have been typing on one machine or another, and now have started collecting as my little part in the preservation of the great machines of he past.



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