In the first decade of the 19th century C.E., three Italian inventors — working largely in isolation from one another — built mechanical devices capable of transferring written characters onto paper. None of them knew they were laying the groundwork for a machine that would eventually transform offices, accelerate commerce, and reshape who could participate in the written world.
What the evidence shows
- Early typewriter prototypes: Agostino Fantoni, Pellegrino Turri, and Pietro Conti di Cilavegna each developed mechanical writing devices in Italy between roughly 1800 C.E. and 1823 C.E., making them among the earliest known contributors to typewriter history.
- Mechanical writing device: Turri’s machine, built around 1808 C.E., is particularly notable because letters written on it by his blind friend Countess Carolina Fantoni da Fivizzano survive — among the oldest known documents produced by a typing machine.
- Blind accessibility tool: From its earliest iterations, the mechanical writing device had an accessibility dimension; Turri almost certainly built his machine specifically to help a blind person write independently, a purpose that would recur throughout typewriter history.
Who were these inventors?
The historical record on all three is fragmentary. Agostino Fantoni is believed to have built a device for his blind sister around 1802 C.E. Pietro Conti di Cilavegna constructed a similar machine in the early 1820s C.E.
Pellegrino Turri left the clearest evidence. A series of letters written by Countess Carolina Fantoni da Fivizzano — his friend, and possibly a romantic connection — still exist in an Italian archive. Typed in carbon ink, they date to around 1808 C.E. and are widely regarded by historians as among the earliest surviving examples of typewritten text anywhere in the world.
None of the three men patented their designs. None sought commercial production. They were solving an immediate human problem — how to help someone who could not see write clearly — rather than building toward a market. That impulse, practical and personal rather than entrepreneurial, distinguishes them from later inventors who drove the typewriter toward mass adoption.
The broader context of mechanical writing
Historians have estimated that something resembling a typewriter was independently invented roughly 52 times across the 18th and 19th centuries C.E., as tinkerers, engineers, and concerned individuals in Europe and America tried to crack the same problem. The Italian efforts sit near the beginning of that long chain.
By the mid-19th century C.E., the pace of business communication had created commercial pressure to mechanize writing. Stenographers and telegraphers could record information at up to 130 words per minute, while the fastest pen-writer topped out at around 30. That gap drove serious investment in typing machines across Europe and North America.
The first commercially sold typewriter was the Hansen Writing Ball, invented in Denmark by Rasmus Malling-Hansen and brought to market in 1870 C.E. The first commercially successful keyboard typewriter followed in 1873 C.E., produced by E. Remington and Sons in New York — and with it came the QWERTY layout that still dominates English-language keyboards today.
The Italian inventors of the early 1800s C.E. are not credited with that commercial breakthrough. But they belong to the lineage. Their machines, built in obscurity, demonstrated that the idea was workable decades before it became profitable.
Lasting impact
The typewriter’s eventual mass adoption reshaped the 20th century C.E. in ways that still reverberate. It opened professional writing to a far wider population — including, crucially, women, who entered clerical and secretarial work in large numbers as the typewriter spread through offices in the 1880s and 1890s C.E.
The machine was also, from its earliest days, an accessibility tool. Turri built his prototype specifically for a blind user. Later developments — including Braille typewriters and specialized keyboards — extended that tradition. The typewriter helped establish a principle that mechanical writing technology could and should serve people that handwriting excluded.
And the QWERTY keyboard layout, developed for typewriters in the 1870s C.E., became so entrenched that no successor technology has dislodged it. Every time a person types on a laptop or a smartphone, they are using a letter arrangement designed for a machine that no longer exists — one whose origins trace back, in part, to a small group of Italian inventors solving a personal problem in the early 19th century C.E.
The typewriter also influenced literature directly. Writers from Mark Twain to Jack Kerouac shaped their prose around its rhythms. Some scholars argue the machine changed not just how people wrote, but how people thought about writing — as a public, printable act rather than a private, handwritten one.
Blindspots and limits
The historical record for Fantoni, Turri, and Conti is thin. No surviving machine built by any of them is known to exist, and the documentation of Fantoni’s and Conti’s devices relies largely on secondary sources. Turri’s letters survive, but his machine does not, and details of its mechanism remain unknown.
It is also worth noting that the early typewriter’s liberating effects were uneven. The same machines that opened professional writing to more people also created new hierarchies — with typing work often undervalued precisely because it became associated with women and clerical labor. The technology carried both emancipatory and constraining social meanings simultaneously, depending on who was using it and under what conditions.
Finally, the global history of writing mechanization extends beyond Europe. Japanese and Chinese typewriters, adapted to far larger character sets, followed a different design path — using index-based selection rather than keyboards — and represent a parallel and largely independent tradition of innovation that mainstream histories of the typewriter rarely center.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Typewriter
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- The global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on modern history
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