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B. LINDSTRAND COMPARATORS
1971 Gordon Lindstrand, an assistant professor of English at the University of South Carolina, announced the first viable alternative to the Hinman Collator (Lindstrand, "Mechanized Textual Collation") [plate 2]. He had developed his device in the 1960s while a graduate student at the University of Illinois, where his dissertation concerned textual matters in Conrad's Nostromo. His invention, dubbed the Lindstrand Comparator (and also known as the Mark I), was offered in two models—the Comparator Criterion and the Comparator Library Custom. The Comparator Criterion,

The Lindstrand Comparator utilizes stereoscopic principles to detect typographical and other printed variations in nearly identical printed documents, usually those descending from the same edition. Stereoscopes have been utilized for everything from parlor entertainment to astronomical work since at least the early part of the nineteenth century ("Stereoscope"). Rather than relying on lights and shutters to present alternate images as with the Hinman, the Lindstrand was built to take advantage of the central nervous system's capacity to "fuse" images of two identical or nearly identical objects together when said objects are presented in a manner conducive to such fusion. Gordon Lindstrand's device was simply an "environmental apparatus" designed to facilitate this process (Lindstrand, The Lindstrand Comparator[1]). The researcher views two texts set up in separate cradles and positioned beneath a set of binocular optics. The optics, a set of mirrors, and a prism help overlay the texts in a kind of virtual superimposition. When this effect is achieved, small discrepancies between the texts seem to stand above the similarities in 3D. Big differences (for example, several reset lines) appear as areas of "total confusion" (Lindstrand, "Mechanized" 209). In contrast to its predecessor, however, the Lindstrand requires two good eyes on the part of the viewer. The Hinman is the only collator that can be used by individuals lacking good vision in one eye.
Lindstrand got the idea for the comparator from a mapmaker in Champagne, Illinois (Roberta Lindstrand). He noted in a promotional pamphlet that stereoscopic view "has in the past been particularly appropriate for mapmaking from aerial photographic surveys" (The Lindstrand Comparator). He also remarked in his 1971 Studies in Bibliography article that similar devices had been used in the military, though "for an entirely different purpose" from the one he was proposing (209).[4] As I have mentioned elsewhere, Charlton Hinman apparently experimented with a stereoscope just after WWII, and there is also evidence that before the war other bibliographers

In 1976, the Comparator Criterion cost $940. The two lamps, which again were optional features, cost an extra $48.00, and a dust cover could be purchased for $24.00 (Lindstrand, Comparator Research Associates [1]). The price of the Library Custom model varied upward according to the requested specifications, though again I do not know if he ever sold one of these larger models. At this time, the Hinman Collator was selling for around $8000. Lindstrand built his machine under the company name Comparator Research Associates, and over the course of about six years sold around thirty-eight devices to people and organizations (universities, libraries, research centers, etc.) throughout the United States and in Canada, England, South Africa, and Australia.
Lindstrand published one location list in a bibliographical journal and issued updates with his promotional material ("Lindstrand Comparators: A Summary Report;" The Lindstrand Comparator).[5] These have been the primary sources in compiling the list below, though I have also interviewed people who knew Lindstrand and/or used his machine. Additionally, I have recovered a few documents and letters that have also provided useful information. These interviews and documents have led me to two machines (or, rather, one machine and a "ghost"—more about the latter in a moment) that were not included in the list and updates. I have confirmed at least the original location (or lack thereof—again, more in a moment) of every Comparator recorded by Lindstrand. Information on his invention, however, has been generally harder to track down and verify than for the Hinman. The arrival of a Lindstrand did not attract the same level of attention. The comparator was much less visually striking and much more easily disassembled, stowed away, and forgotten or lost than its predecessor. Moreover, its inventor did not leave nearly the paper trail that Arthur Johnson did.
There is a longstanding rumor that Gordon Lindstrand reneged on the delivery of several machines after accepting payment for them. In some versions of the story he is said to have absconded with the funds and lived the rest of his life on the run, more or less. In another version he did jail time. The truth is less sensational. He was considering going out of business as early as 1975 (Lindstrand, Letter to William L. Mitchell). In 1976 or 1977, he appears to have stopped making comparators and failed to follow through on the delivery of at least three. These were machines promised to Trinity College, Cambridge; the University of Leeds; and Trinity College, Dublin. Records referring to the non-delivery of these machines are located in the archives of the latter. They indicate that he accepted at least partial

Were there more machines, either built and sold or sold and never delivered?I do not think so, though all I can say with certainty is that I have not found evidence of others. Despite my doubts as to its existence, I have chosen to give the Calgary machine a separate entry below, as I have for the devices I know Lindstrand did not deliver. Except for Leeds, these were all claimed by Lindstrand in print and so listing them with an appropriate note not only makes them easier to index but also facilitates correcting the record. The machines in this section are listed alphabetically by the last known location. As mentioned above, the machines that were never delivered are listed where they were supposed to have gone. A chronological arrangement is not possible because of the lack of records. Furthermore, since the Lindstrand was sold over a much shorter time period than the Hinman (five or six years as opposed to nearly thirty), sorting out the dates would not only be more difficult but probably less valuable. When the original location is known and differs from the current, that fact is noted in parentheses along with other potentially useful information.
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B1. Arizona State University, University Library, Department of Special Collections
ARIZONA

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B2. Florida State University, English Department
FLORIDA
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B3. Northern Illinois University, English Department
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B4. Southern Illinois University
Purchased for work on the Dewey edition and originally located in the John Dewey Studies Center. According to Jo Ann Boydston, editor of the Dewey edition, it was passed on to the Morris Library fairly soon after its arrival because the editors of the edition found the Hinman much easier and more efficient to use. It is currently located in the Special Collections Department of the Morris Library.
ILLINOIS
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B5. Ball State University, English Department
Surplused around 1960.
INDIANA
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B6. Kansas State University, English Department
Current disposition unknown.
KANSAS
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B7. Eastern Kentucky University, John Crabbe Grant Library
KENTUCKY
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B8. Harvard University, Houghton Library
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B9. University of Massachusetts at Boston, University Library
Current disposition unknown.
MASSACHUSETTS
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B10. Mississippi State University, English Department
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B11. University of Southern Mississippi, English Department
Purchased in 1977. Lindstrand told Noel Polk that this was his last machine.
MISSISSIPPI
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B12. University of Nebraska, Willa Cather edition
Originally purchased for the Harold Frederic edition at the University of Texas, Arlington.
NEBRASKA
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B13. Princeton University, Firestone Library
Originally purchased for the Henry David Thoreau edition.
NEW JERSEY
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B14. Cornell University, Kroch Library
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B15. State University of New York at Fredonia, University Library
NEW YORK
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B16. Bowling Green University, University Library, Rare Books and Special Collections Department
Originally purchased for the George Washington Cable edition.
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B17. Kent State University, University Library, Institute for Bibliography and Editing
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B18. Ohio University
Current disposition unknown. Originally purchased for the Robert Browning edition.
OHIO

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B19. State College, James L. W. West
West purchased this machine when he was on the faculty at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia, and moved it with him when he joined the faculty of Penn State University.
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B20. University of Pennsylvania, Van Pelt Library
PENNSYLVANIA
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B21. Brown University, John Hay Library
RHODE ISLAND
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B22. University of South Carolina, Thomas Cooper Library, Special Collections Department
Originally purchased by and located in the office of the Center for Editions of American Authors.
SOUTH CAROLINA
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B23. Texas A&M University, Cushing Memorial Library and Archives
Originally purchased by the Department of English and later transferred to the Library. Surplused around 1992. -
B24. Texas A&M University, Cushing Memorial Library and Archives
Originally purchased by Joseph Katz, Columbia, South Carolina. Acquired by Texas A&M in 2003. -
B25. Texas Tech University, Southwest Collection/Special Collections
Originally purchased for the Joseph Conrad edition. -
B26. University of Houston, M. D. Anderson Library, Department of Special Collections
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B27. University of Texas at Austin, Humanities Research Center
TEXAS
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B28. Nellysford, Catherine Rodriguez
Originally purchased by Matthew Bruccoli, Columbia, South Carolina.
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B29. University of Virginia, Alderman Library, Department of Special Collections
VIRGINIA
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B30. Monash University, University Library
AUSTRALIA
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B31. Simon Fraser University
Current disposition unknown.
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B32. University of Calgary
I have been unable to confirm whether this device was ever delivered.
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B33. University of Toronto, Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library
CANADA
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B34. Cambridge University, Trinity Library
This machine was ordered and paid for in part or whole but never delivered.
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B35. Oxford University, Bodleian Library, Department of Western Manuscripts, Johnson Reading Room
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B36. University of Leeds
This machine was ordered and paid for in part or whole but never delivered.
ENGLAND

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B37. University of Dublin, Trinity College Library
This machine was ordered and paid for in part or whole but never delivered.
IRELAND
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B38. Rhodes University, Institute for the Study of English in Africa
Current disposition unknown.
SOUTH AFRICA
Stereoscopes have indeed been used in the interpretation of aerial photographs, which, when taken from directly overhead, present a very unnatural view—because the objects pictured appear flat they are difficult for a viewer to recognize. Military photoanalysts and mapmakers use the stereoscope to view two photographs, slightly offset from one another, taken consecutively along the line of flight or simultaneously from different cameras in the same plane. This creates a 3-D effect that gives the images contour and thus makes them easier to interpret (Stanley 265-270).
Announcements and descriptions of the machine were also published in PMLA 89 (1974): 1338, and BiN: Bibliography Newsletter 2.6 (June 1974): 2.
Unfortunately I have not been able to examine these records, though their contents have been summarized for me. They date from 1975 to 1982 and range from internal discussion before ordering to Lindstrand's acknowledgement of money to correspondence with Leeds and Cambridge, who also ordered but never received machines. I am grateful to Charles Benson, Keeper of Early Printed Books, for providing me this information. By library policy the file will remain closed until 2012, thirty years from the date of the creation of the last item in the file.
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