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Walter Shawlee, the Sovereign of Slide Rules, Is Dead at 73
DNYUZ ^ | February 8, 2024 | N/A

Posted on 02/24/2024 6:28:03 PM PST by DoodleBob

For about 350 years, humanity’s most innovative hand-held computer was something called a slide rule. As typewriters once symbolized the writer, slide rules symbolized the engineer.

These analog calculators came in metal, wood, plastic and even bamboo, and they could be found all over the world. Their functions included computing higher-order multiplications, exponents and logarithms, among other mathematical operations. They were usually long and rectangular with a retractable middle segment, and they featured dense fields of letters, lines and numbers stacked on top of one another.

They looked almost comically abstruse, as if they might be used as paddles in the hazing rituals of a math fraternity.

Non-nerds struggled to make sense of them. Then, in the early 1970s, lightweight electronic calculators became widely available. The market for slide rules collapsed, and manufacturing of new devices essentially ceased.

One day, about 20 years later, a middle-aged avionics engineer by the name of Walter Shawlee was looking through a drawer at his home in Kelowna, a midsize city in British Columbia, when he happened upon his old slide rule from high school.

It was a Keuffel & Esser pocket Deci-Lon, model 68-1130, with a slender Ivorite body and delicate see-through cursor box. Both had stood the test of time. Mr. Shawlee remembered that as a teenager he had spent six months saving up money to buy it.

Inspired by this encounter with his youth, he created a website dedicated to slide rules. Before long, nostalgic math whizzes of decades past came across the site. Emails poured into Mr. Shawlee’s inbox. He began spending eight hours a day researching, buying, fixing and reselling old slide rules.

“Are you trying to corner the slide-rule market?” his wife, Susan Shawlee, asked him nervously, The Wall Street Journal reported in 2003.

The magazine of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Spectrum, determined in 2007 that Mr. Shawlee had, in fact, “cornered the world market.”

“He’s Mr. Slide Rule,” a Texas engineer and slide-rule enthusiast told The Journal. “Walter knows everybody in the slide-rule racket.”

Mr. Shawlee died on Sept. 4 last year at his home in Kelowna. He was 73. The death was not widely reported at the time, and The New York Times was notified about it only last month. His wife said the cause was cancer.

Mr. Shawlee was not merely a slide-rule sentimentalist in thrall to memories of teenage geekdom. He argued that slide rules had intrinsic appeal for several reasons.

He saw dignity, for example, in their solidity and design. In a 1999 profile by The Times, Mr. Shawlee described slide rules as “the techno-guys’ version of a broadsword.” On his website, the Slide Rule Universe, he contrasted them with digital technology. “In 50 years, the computer you are using to view this webpage will be landfill,” he wrote, “but your trusty slide rule will just be nicely broken in!”

To Mr. Shawlee, the lost durability represented by slide rules belonged to a broader narrative of decline. “When we used slide rules every day back in the 1960s, we were able to send people to the moon,” Mr. Shawlee told The Journal. Speaking to The Times, he observed, “People who grow up with calculators have no number sense.”

Joe Pasquale, a computer science and engineering professor at the University of California, San Diego, has taught classes in the “history, theory and practice” of slide rules, including a survey of “the greatest slide rules ever made,” as he put it in a course description.

In an email, Professor Pasquale explained the pedagogical value of slide rules. Calculators tend to replace the human mind, requiring users only to punch in numbers and “blindly accept” a result, leading to a loss in the user’s own ability to calculate — “and more generally, think,” Professor Pasquale wrote. Whereas slide rules demand active involvement, he added, “extending the mind’s calculating ability.”

It was Mr. Shawlee’s good fortune that a surprising number of people shared these views. In the early 2000s, he was earning $125,000 a year fixing and reselling slide rules. The business paid for his two children to go to college, and it sent one of them to law school. His customer base took its most organized form in the Oughtred Society, a club named in honor of William Oughtred, the Anglican minister generally recognized to have invented the slide rule in the early 1620s.

Mr. Shawlee’s website developed a subculture of its own, with a network of slide rule-o-philes from Arizona to Venezuela to Malaysia digging on Mr. Shawlee’s behalf through the mildewed wares of old stationery stores and estate sales and school district warehouses in search of slide rules. In Singapore, a civil servant, Foo Sheow Ming, visited the back room of a bookstore and found 40 unopened crates of more than 12,000 slide rules in multiple varieties. On his website, Mr. Shawlee called the find “the absolute El Dorado of slide rules,” and Mr. Foo told The Journal that it was “the mother lode.”

Prohibited by government regulations from turning a profit on the goods, Mr. Foo sold the slide rules to Mr. Shawlee at a discount. “It’s all in the thrill of the hunt,” he told The Journal.

Mr. Shawlee’s inventory included remarkable artifacts of science history. He offered a slide rule made for machine gun operators, with calculations for wind, elevation and range. He offered a slide rule for measuring metabolic rates, with different settings for age, sex and height. And he used his website to explore recondite points of slide rule-iana, writing, for example, about slide rules made by the U.S. government for calculating nuclear bomb effects.

“Need to know the optimum burst height for that new nuke you just bought?” Mr. Shawlee asked in a mock sales pitch. “How about the high confidence kill zone radius, or temperature at some exact distance from the nuclear weapon that just went off down the block? These babies can answer all those burning questions as you get flambéed into free ions and radioactive dust at about 1,300 m.p.h.”

He also sold slide-rule cuff links and slide-rule tie clips, which in some cases had been made by major slide-rule manufacturers as promotional items during what Mr. Shawlee called “the golden age of slide rules.” The tie clips proved so popular on the Slide Rule Universe that Mr. Shawlee worked with a small foundry to start manufacturing them himself.

Over time, his customers included a weather station in Antarctica, where many electronic gadgets could not take the cold; photo editors responsible for adjusting image sizes (they like slide rules for their clear displays of different values for the same ratio); an archaeologist who found that calculators got too dusty to work properly during digs; the drug company Pfizer, which gave away slide rules as gifts during a trade show; slide-rule enthusiasts in Afghanistan and French Polynesia; and “guys from NASA,” Mr. Shawlee told Engineering Times in 2000.

Walter Shawlee II was born on Nov. 27, 1949, in Los Angeles. His mother, Joan (Fulton) Shawlee, was an actress known for playing Sweet Sue, the leader of the “girls’ band” at the center of the film, “Some Like It Hot” (1959), and for playing Pickles Sorrell, a recurring character on “The Dick Van Dyke Show” (1961-66). His father was a hotel concierge and painter who specialized in sea scenes.

At 14, Walter worked at an electronics surplus store and devotedly read magazines like Electronics World. He studied engineering and math at the University of California in Los Angeles before dropping out. He worked a variety of jobs, including as an assembly-line welder at a Volvo factory in Sweden, before establishing Northern Airborne Technology, a successful aviation communications firm, in Kelowna. He sold the company in 1992.

After that, he became a tinkerer and inventor for hire, helping companies design, for example, machines that could gently apply labels to a variety of fruits. He fixed and resold gadgets including signal generators, high-voltage rectifiers and cathode ray tubes.

He and his wife first met at U.C.L.A., and they married in 1971. In addition to her, he is survived by their children, Walt III and Rose Shawlee, and a half sister, Angie Barchet.

When The Journal visited the Shawlee household, there were about 1,000 slide rules scattered across the dining table, Mr. Shawlee’s home office and the family sauna. “I know my wife would like to get her dining room back soon,” he told Spectrum magazine.

In a phone interview, Ms. Shawlee said that thousands of the devices were still in the family’s home. She said she planned to continue selling them. As far as she knows, there is no prospect of another collector-expert-fixer-dealer-romantic like Mr. Shawlee emerging in “the slide-rule racket.”


TOPICS: Computers/Internet; Reference; Science
KEYWORDS: sliderule
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To: Leaning Right; Jamestown1630; lizma2; Seaplaner

Slide Rule ping.


21 posted on 02/24/2024 7:07:33 PM PST by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s²)
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To: DoodleBob

Slide rules made the SR-71 and got us to the Moon. I have a slide rule app on my iPad just for fun.

The thing about slide rules is that you could make them for anything. I’ve seen them for calculating nuclear weapons effects and one specific to the performance of the P-51 Mustang.


22 posted on 02/24/2024 7:09:58 PM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: crusty old prospector; doorgunner69
Thanks, doorgunner69; Behold, the HP-15C


23 posted on 02/24/2024 7:10:18 PM PST by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s²)
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To: crusty old prospector

You need an 11C or 15C. They are very expensive. They had quit making.


24 posted on 02/24/2024 7:10:44 PM PST by alternatives?
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To: DoodleBob

That was my favorite calc ever, lol. Those old Smoley tables were killed off by this beast. Anyone remember planimeters? I used one for mass properties. They have an app for that now, hehe.

I had been watching videos of Ft. Ancient pottery today and realized an old homemade drafting tool from many years ago might be useful in finding the approximate center and size of a pot from just a shard. I think I will try to introduce it to the archaeology community.


25 posted on 02/24/2024 7:13:33 PM PST by OftheOhio (never could dance but always could fight - Romeo company)
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To: fishtank

I still have the one I bought when I learned to fly around 1976.


26 posted on 02/24/2024 7:13:55 PM PST by Glennb51
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To: alternatives?; crusty old prospector

HP started selling licensed collectors editions of the 15C in 2023.

https://hpcalcs.com/product/hp-15c-collectors-edition/


27 posted on 02/24/2024 7:16:59 PM PST by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s²)
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To: DoodleBob

One of my favorite memories of my son, who was something of a math wiz and grew up with calculators, was when he was in middle school and I showed him how to do multiplication on my old Keuffel and Esser, to which he responded “What wondrous sorcery is this!”


28 posted on 02/24/2024 7:17:02 PM PST by Stosh
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To: DoodleBob

12C still my GoTo!

But I’ll never forget my SR-50!


29 posted on 02/24/2024 7:18:47 PM PST by pghoilman (Earth First. We'll drill the rest of the galaxy later.)
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To: Attention Surplus Disorder

I found it easier to just do the Algebra. Most stated interest rates are nominal on a monthly basis as opposed to annual effective rates.


30 posted on 02/24/2024 7:19:04 PM PST by alternatives?
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To: Sacajaweau

At my school, the A-stream math teacher had us do both slide rule tests, and calculator tests. (I graduated 1982).

I had to buy a slide rule around 1980 and they were already getting hard to find.

My dad (Physics professor) used to use a slide rule to calculate grades, because you could set it up to calculate 40 percent of the midterm mark, or whatever, and just read it off.


31 posted on 02/24/2024 7:20:02 PM PST by Reverend Wright ( Everything touched by progressives, dies !)
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To: DoodleBob

At age 12, my father gave me a small slide rule. Two years prior, I hafd taken the FAA grouund school and ised the then ccirrent circular ground nav slife rule.In the military basic electronics class, slide rules were prohibiyef but electronic slide rules were allowed.

ROP PROFESSOR.


32 posted on 02/24/2024 7:20:13 PM PST by Terry L Smith
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To: DoodleBob

I have not seen Pickles Sorrell mentioned in years. Always found anything involving her funny. Interesting article.


33 posted on 02/24/2024 7:21:00 PM PST by PghBaldy (12/14/12 - 930am -rampage begins... 12/15/12 - 1030am - Obama team scouts pt know hoto-op locations.)
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To: crusty old prospector

“My only beef is that it doesn’t have trig functions.”

That’s what the companion HP-11C is for.


34 posted on 02/24/2024 7:21:06 PM PST by ProtectOurFreedom (“Occupy your mind with good thoughts or your enemy will fill them with bad ones.” ~ Thomas More)
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To: OftheOhio

I left my first 12C in a NYC cab, after some meeting. I was so peeved at myself.

I bought a new one and still have it.

I also have the official 12C app. Candidly, the physical keys are so much better. And call me crazy, but when press i to get the IRR on the app, it gives the answer immediately vs the flashing “running” on the handheld - it just ain’t the same!


35 posted on 02/24/2024 7:22:39 PM PST by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s²)
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To: Stosh
What wondrous sorcery is this!

I may have to use that at work. It’s priceless.

36 posted on 02/24/2024 7:24:11 PM PST by DoodleBob (Gravity's waiting period is about 9.8 m/s²)
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To: JAKraig

I too had a T59 with programs, etc. even learned to program it and write my own. I had and still have several printers. My printers kept crapping out, so I bought several over the years.


37 posted on 02/24/2024 7:24:56 PM PST by Reily (!!)
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To: DoodleBob

The price is unbelievable compared to the 12C. They should really be about the same price.


38 posted on 02/24/2024 7:26:14 PM PST by alternatives?
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To: DoodleBob

Paul Simon best expressed my understanding of a slide rule.


39 posted on 02/24/2024 7:26:21 PM PST by Responsibility2nd (A truth that’s told with bad intent, Beats all the lies you can invent ~ Wm. Blake)
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To: DoodleBob

That’s the one I was thinking of, had the trig functions. It’s right here in the desk drawer.


40 posted on 02/24/2024 7:26:55 PM PST by OftheOhio (never could dance but always could fight - Romeo company)
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