A mid-century Trippensee Tellurium
This very atomic looking apparatus
is without a doubt an unusual Mid Century conversation piece.
It was designed to help teachers
demonstrate the motions of the Earth and Moon around the Sun.
By using a series of chain driven
pulleys attached to spheres representing the sun, venus, earth
and moon, the device reproduced the motions of the solar system.
A Canadian by the name of Laing patented
his tellurium on August 27, 1896 in Canada and on March 2,
1897 in the United States. He set up manufacturing operations
in Detroit, Michigan as the Laing Planetarium Co.
In 1905, three brothers by the name
of Trippensee took over the firm, reorganizing as the Trippensee
Manufacturing Co. Their first products were marketed as Laing
Planetariums, however a new improved model was soon introduced
bearing their own name that substituted a more reliable bicycle-style
chain and gear drive.
The tellurium we are offering is
such. It has evolved one step further by being electric. The
red arm rotates around the yellow ball (made of bakelite or
plastic), which represents the sun and a black and white bakelite
ball rotating around it is Venus. Earth consists of a hollow
orb, covered by individual paper gores and made by Crams.
It is mounted onto the other end of the bakelite arm and rotates
around the sun as well as its own axis. The moon (black and
white ball made of wood) circles around Earth. The base is
made of very heavy cast iron and finished in a retro red color,
matching the bakelite arm. A compass is located on the arm.
All is functional and in very good condition.
A superb piece in motion! Perhaps
a childhood memory, viewing the wonders of the universe at
the planetarium.
Here is your opportunity to share
those memories at home with your children. Either way, an
unusual Mid Century conversation piece.
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