Monday, June 8, 2009

History of Pencils

The Story of Pencils Lesson Plan: Activity 2 - The History of the Pencil?

The Early Days
Modern pencils are the descendants of ancient writing instruments.

In ancient Rome, scribes wrote on papyrus (an early form of paper) with a thin metal rod called a stylus, which left a light but readable mark. Other early styluses were made of lead. Today we still call the core of a pencil the "lead" even though it is made from nontoxic graphite.

Graphite came into widespread use following the discovery of a large graphite deposit in Borrowdale, England in 1564. Graphite left a darker mark than lead, but was so soft and brittle that it required a holder. At first, sticks of graphite were wrapped in string. Later, the graphite was inserted into wooden sticks that had been hollowed-out by hand! The wood-cased pencil was born.



Oldest Known Wood Cased Pencil – Faber-Castell collection

The first mass-produced pencils were made in Nuremberg, Germany in 1662. There an active pencil industry developed with famous companies like Faber-Castell established in 1761, Lyra, Steadtler and others growing throughout the 19th century industial revolution.

Development of the US Industry
Until the war with England cut off imports, pencils used in America came from overseas. William Monroe, a cabinetmaker in Concord, Massachusetts, made the first American wood pencils in 1812 as did another Concord area maker, famous author Henry David Thoreau.

Click here to learn more about famous people who have used pencils.

Other eary US manufacturers that helped industrialize pencil making in the United States were Joseph Dixon Crucible Company (now Dixon Ticonderoga) and a number of factories established in New York and New Jersey towards the end of the 19th century by immigrants from the German industry including Faber Castell, Eberhard Faber, Eagle Pencil Company (Later Berol) and General Pencil Company.



Eagle Pencil Factory - New York

The first mass-produced pencils were unpainted, to show off their high-quality wood casings. However, by the 1890s, many manufacturers were painting their pencils and giving them brand names. There's an interesting story behind the familiar yellow color of the common pencil. Click this link to find out why pencils are yellow.

March 30, 2008 was the 150th Anniversary of the Hymen Lipman patent on eraser tipped pencils. Read more here.

Following the Wood
Early American pencils were made from Eastern Red Cedari, a strong, splinter-resistant wood that grew in Tennessee and other parts of the southeastern United States. Many Northern manufacturers set up wood mills in Tennessee and other Southern states where Eastern Red Cedar grows. Eventually much of the US pencil manufacturing industry established pencil factories in Tennessee where the remaining US producers are primarily concentrated today.

By the early 1900s, pencil manufacturers needed additional sources of wood, and turned to California's Sierra Nevada mountains. There they found Incense-cedar, a species that grew in abundance and made superior pencils. California Incense-cedari soon became the wood of choice for domestic and international pencil makers around the world.

To ensure the continued availability of Incense-cedar, forest workers have carefully managed the stands of trees in which Incense-cedar grows, and timber companies have been careful to harvest the trees on a sustained-yieldi basis. "Sustained-yield" means that the annual growth of the forest is greater than the amount harvested from the forest. Forests managed on a sustained-yield basis are abundant and healthy, and will continue to provide wood for people and habitat for animals for generations to come.

A Global Industry
The history of the pencil industry includes a great number of important companies and brands from around the world. Many of the major brands now have factories throughout the world. The reduction of trade barriers, the introduction of containerized shipments of goods overseas, the comparative differences in raw material costs between countries and the lower cost of tranporting people and information around the world have lead the pencil industry like many others to experience the challenging impact of globalization. This has lead to a great shift in the past 20 years of where pencils are produced with increasing concentration of manufacturing in Asia.





Works Cited : http://www.pencils.com/pencil-information/pencil-history

2 comments:

  1. The breakthrough in pencil technology came from French chemist named Nicolas Conte invented and patented the process to make pencils in 1795. He used a combination of clay and graphite that was lit before it was placed in a wooden box. The pencils he made were cylindrical with a gap. The square lead was attached into the slot and a thin strip of wood was used to fill the rest of the slot. Pencils were named from the old English word meaning 'brush'. Nicolas Conte's technique of kiln firing powdered graphite and clay permitted pencils to be created to any hardness or softness which would be imperative to artists and draftsmen. Today, we use pencils everyday without awareness of what it takes to make one. It’s fascinating to see how we evolve from one object into another.

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  2. As an education major, I am very fond of your theme! I am almost ashamed to admit that I have never really taken the time to think about how greatly technology as impacted education. Look at each of us, taking an online course. It certainly shows how much of an impact there really is. As a student of the technological generation, we have become accustomed to each of these advancements. As a matter of fact, they are more of an expectation at this point. We are used to having computers in every classroom… I can hardly even imagine a room without it.
    But when I think of not even having a pencil, I am almost overwhelmed. The invention of the pencil has had a profound impact on each of our lives before we ever realized it. It allows us to communicate, express our thoughts, or simply jot down a reminder. Without it, we would be lost. It seems like such a simple concept. Before reading this post, I never realized the time and effort that went into to creating such a simple object. This was an eye-opener, well done Meatheads!

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