Circa 1930s IBM Oak Cabinet Clock
- Regular price
- $0.00
- Sale price
- $0.00
- Regular price
-
Description
36H” x 15.5W” x 9D”
An oak wood cabinet clock, made by International Business Machines (IBM) in the 1930s. Interior pendulum.
In the 1890s, timekeepers-- clerks who kept track of employees' hours in handwritten logs --found that machines were beginning to replace them, especially in workplaces with large numbers of employees. Thanks to the influence of the advocates of scientific management, nearly every industrial workplace had a time clock, after about 1910. So did many offices. By the early twentieth century the International Time Recording Company supplied an entire line of timekeeping devices, including master clocks, several types of time clocks, and time stamps. Founded in 1900, the firm continuously expanded its product line, underwent several reorganizations and name changes, and emerged in 1924 as the International Business Machine Corporation, familiar today as IBM.