Morgantown Native Collects Dozens Of Rare Oliver Typewriters

Jett Morton is pretty good at installing new shelves for his growing collection.

Between the “Typewriter Room” in his parents’ basement and the four large metal shelving units in the living room of his Morgantown home, his collection of antique typewriters take up a lot of space.

“I was at over 300 machines,” Morton said. “I had lost counts between 300 and 350.”

Driven by nostalgia, typewriters have gained a surge of popularity in recent years. Before typewriters were cool (again), there was an existing worldwide community of people like Morton who collect, repair and use typewriters.

For him, this hobby started at the age of seven when his parents would take him to yard sales and flea markets.

Morton already had an interest in regular computers. At a yard sale, he saw something that looked like a computer: a typewriter.

“I didn’t know where the monitor was,” Morton said. “I didn’t know what it was. So my dad showed me. He got it for me. I typed on it, thought it was neat.”

Duncan Slade
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WVPB
Morton types on an Oliver typewriter

After this first typewriter, he went to visit a family friend in Morgantown who owns over 800 typewriters.

“He gave me the first typewriter that he got when he first started collecting,” Morton said. “That’s what really fueled me to start getting more antique machines.”

Morton’s parents had a spare basement room that became the typewriter room. It was wall to wall with typewriters pressed up against each other.

“I had several rare Olivers and I liked the design,” Morton said, “I thought ‘Well let’s see how many Olivers I can get.’”

He sold off some of his other machines and the number of Olivers is up to 54. He says it’s likely the largest Oliver collection in the world with some of the rarest machines.

Jett Morton
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Reverend Thomas Oliver (photo now owned by great-grandson Lester Oliver).

Thomas Oliver, the founder of the Oliver Typewriter Co., was Canadian by birth. As a Midwest pastor in the late 19th century, he wanted an easier way to write his sermons.

He designed one of the first “visible print” typewriters.

“Before the Oliver, when you type on the keys, the tight bars used to swing up from underneath to hit the platen,” Morton said as he showed the Oliver’s mechanism. “You couldn’t see as you type until you were done.”

The preacher’s original design was patented in 1891 and became the Oliver One.

Over a million Oliver machines were manufactured in Chicago, up until the Great Depression when the company was sold to investors in England.

British Oliver produced typewriters until the company closed in 1959.

The design was also licensed around the world under names like Courier in Austria and Stolzenburg in Germany.

In Argentina, the Oliver name was already trademarked. So they called it Revilo (That’s Oliver spelled backwards).

Duncan Slade
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WVPB
Morton shows Oliver Typewriter memorabilia.

Morton’s favorite machine is a special edition Woodstock Oliver typewriter. It’s over 130 years old and named for the factory location in Woodstock, Illinois.

This rare version of the Woodstock was made exclusively for department store Montgomery Ward.

“They only made 19 of them,” Morton said. “There was an advertisement in the Montgomery Ward catalog of 1898 that had this machine.”

For years, Morton said, collectors have seen this advertisement but not the actual typewriter.

“They made only 19. I mean, that’s not going to be around. And one day a Woodstock showed up on eBay.”

Morton bought it.

Duncan Slade
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WVPB
Morton’s Woodstock Typewriter

He gets a lot of machines on eBay or other online forums these days. His eye looks for rare stuff like the original Oliver One model, a German model known as Jacoby, and a few Italian portable models.

“I probably have a list of a couple dozen Olivers with this and that I don’t have,” Morton said. “It really just depends what shows up for sale.”

 

Morton said over the past few years the worldwide typewriter community has rapidly expanded online.

In 2016, a documentary called “California Typewriter” starring Tom Hanks, an avid typewriter collector himself, attracted new attention for the typewriter community. Morton even had a cameo in the film.

“The main thing, I think that is my fascination with them is that they are perfect devices,” Hanks said to the PBS NewsHour in 2017. “They do one thing and only one thing. You can’t make a phone call on a typewriter and you can’t pull up today’s New York Times.”

Hanks owns hundreds of typewriters, wrote a book about typewriters and types on them a lot. Morton doesn’t type on his machines; it’s all about collecting the Olivers.

Still, they’re both members of the same worldwide community of typewriter collectors.

“The community is what makes typewriter collecting what it is today,” said Morton.” I mean, it’s about the machines, but it’s more about the people and the history of the collecting and meeting the people that you meet.”

Duncan Slade
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WVPB
Morton types on his Woodstock Oliver typewriter.

Staging the Auction to Sell the Collection of a Lifetime

More than fifty years of marriage… plus two international performing careers… plus a shared passion for seeking out eclectic and interesting objects… adds up to one remarkable collection. World-famous opera singer Frances Yeend  and her husband amassed just such a collection. It’ll be auctioned off starting this weekend at the Sagebrush Roundup near Fairmont.

Credit Louis Melancon-Metropolitan Opera Archives
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Frances Yeend in Elektra at the Metropolitan Opera

Frances Yeend spent her twilight years in Morgantown, but earlier her strong soprano voice graced stages and major concert halls around the nation and the world during the 1940s, 50s and 60s. Her husband, James Benner, also traveled far and wide as an accomplished accompanist and voice coach.

In a 2002 interview for West Virginia Public Television’s series Aging With Grace and Dignity, Yeend expressed her love for world travel.

yeendmixdown.mp3
Listen to the audio from the Aging With Grace and Dignity series interview with Frances Yeend and James Benner.

“I love going places,” said Yeend. “I’ve always loved going in different places in the world. Italy and France. Germany. All those places. I’ve been to all the different ones and I’ve enjoyed them very, very  much.”

During their travels, she and her husband began to amass an incredible collection of antiques and books. In the late 60’s they gave up living out of suitcases and left New York City to join the music faculty at West Virginia University.

Their collection came with them to Morgantown…and continued to grow.

(Frances Yeend and James Benner perform in a 1988 recital. She was 75.)

Yeend passed away in 2008 and Benner, faced with some health issues, is downsizing into a small apartment. The time has come, he says, to sell the collection. 

It's hard to suddenly say it's all going to go. – James Benner

“I’ve tried to make my mind set as rigid about getting rid of things as I was about collecting them, back when I was collecting them, in my pack rat stages so to speak,” says Benner. “But it’s a big emotional upheaval to get rid of all these things which we both loved so much and collected over so many years.”  

Benner says his relatives live far away. They’ve had the chance to come and select the things they would like to have. But he didn’t want his family to have to figure out what to do with the rest of it later.

“I had been negotiating somewhat with auction houses in New York for the museum quality stuff,” says Benner. “But it’s so expensive and so difficult to get the things there, and I would still be stuck with everything that’s in the house.”

Enter West Virginia auctioneer Joe R. Pyle, stage left, wearing his trademark cowboy hat. 

Credit https://www.facebook.com/JoeRPyleAuctions
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West Virginia Auctioneer Joe R. Pyle

Yeend and Benner attended many of Pyle’s auctions over the years. He said they were among his best customers. Now his role is to survey the contents of their entire home and prepare the collection for sale.

“When you look at the inventory of this house,” says Pyle. “I mean it’s…they’ve been into lithographs, they’ve been into glassware, Staffordshire, Persian rugs, Asian, ivory, Renaissance furniture, paintings, an unbelievable library of books.”

Pyle says there will be between two and three thousand selling lots, with some lots having as many as 40 or 50 items.  He and his crew have been working behind the scenes for months. They’ve spent lots of time with Benner, who says he’s been happy to talk about the items he loves.

“I often do remember the particular circumstances of a purchase,” says Benner. “Especially if it’s a major purchase, because you think a lot before you decide to spend the money on something. And we didn’t usually buy things with an idea that it was a good purchase marketwise or anything like that. We bought things that we loved.” 

A screenshot of the auction catalog shows thumbnail photos of just a few of the items up for auction.

Quirky items sometimes caught their eye.

“One of the most unusual things that’s in the sale is a Buddhist manuscript which opens like an accordion kind of, it’s almost a foot long – three feet long. And I remember seeing that in a shop in California and thinking every household needs one.”

Pyle says there won’t be another auction like this around here for many, many years. He says it’ll be fun to watch and there will be something there for everybody. 

There will be items that sell for $20. There will be items that sell for $30,000. – Joe R. Pyle

The initial auction will take place this Friday and Saturday…with an additional date of October 2, 2014 that will focus solely on the library. At least one – possibly two more auction days will follow later in October.

So, the stage is set.

“We’re not going to have an opera, we’re going to have an auction,” says Pyle. “So, it’s kind of, you know, leading up to that, we’ve put brochures out the same way they put the poster out in front of the Met, you know. And the advertising piece and let everybody know – get there for the show. So it IS the show.”

Credit Sarah Lowther Hensley
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James Benner at his apartment in Morgantown. On the wall behind him is a portrait of his late wife, Frances Yeend, as well as a few items he’s keeping from their shared collection.
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