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https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/pulling-lever-tallied-vote-98774074/?utm_source=smithsoniandaily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=editorial&spMailingID=50391047&spUserID=NzU3Njg4NDk0NTQS1&spJobID= [login to see] &spReportId=MjgyMDU2MzU3OQS2
Throughout much of this country's post-Revolutionary history, writers and politicians have invoked the ballot as a symbol of a right fundamental to our democracy. Now, as the nation moves to vote once more, it seems appropriate to pay homage to another powerful symbol of our right to make our voices heard. Occupying pride of place among the artifacts in the current exhibition at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History "American Democracy: A Great Leap of Faith" is an 1890s prototype of the classic gear-and-lever booths in which I and many Americans cast their votes.
As far back as the mid-19th century, political reformers sought to make voting more systematic (and, they hoped, more honest). In the late 1890s, New York inventor Alfred J. Gillespie devised a gear-and-lever machine (derived from earlier patents by Jacob H. Meyers) that offered privacy while limiting one man to one vote. (Women were denied the vote until 1920.) The advantages of Gillespie's machine over the ballot box were many, including that it kept a running count, thus speeding up the reporting of results. The machines also could be locked by officials when voting was over, preventing—or at least reducing—tampering. This extraordinary new device wowed the voters in an 1898 town election in Rochester, New York. As the Brooklyn Eagle reported: "Where other cities were hours and even days in counting their votes, Rochester knew the complete result in the city on every office—State, County, Assembly, Senate and Congressional—in just thirty-seven minutes. There was not a mistake, not a hitch."
Throughout much of this country's post-Revolutionary history, writers and politicians have invoked the ballot as a symbol of a right fundamental to our democracy. Now, as the nation moves to vote once more, it seems appropriate to pay homage to another powerful symbol of our right to make our voices heard. Occupying pride of place among the artifacts in the current exhibition at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History "American Democracy: A Great Leap of Faith" is an 1890s prototype of the classic gear-and-lever booths in which I and many Americans cast their votes.
As far back as the mid-19th century, political reformers sought to make voting more systematic (and, they hoped, more honest). In the late 1890s, New York inventor Alfred J. Gillespie devised a gear-and-lever machine (derived from earlier patents by Jacob H. Meyers) that offered privacy while limiting one man to one vote. (Women were denied the vote until 1920.) The advantages of Gillespie's machine over the ballot box were many, including that it kept a running count, thus speeding up the reporting of results. The machines also could be locked by officials when voting was over, preventing—or at least reducing—tampering. This extraordinary new device wowed the voters in an 1898 town election in Rochester, New York. As the Brooklyn Eagle reported: "Where other cities were hours and even days in counting their votes, Rochester knew the complete result in the city on every office—State, County, Assembly, Senate and Congressional—in just thirty-seven minutes. There was not a mistake, not a hitch."
When Pulling a Lever Tallied the Vote
Posted from smithsonianmag.com
Posted 14 d ago
Responses: 5
Posted 14 d ago
I prefer the Colonial method. The sheriff set up outside church on the specified Sunday morning with a clerk to his left and right. A candidate sat at each end and, as the citizens exited the church, they stood before the sheriff and announced their choice. The clerk sitting on the side with the chosen candidate would enter the citizens name on a list and the candidate would stand and bow to the voter while thanking them for their vote. The candidate with the most votes at the end of the day won. Simple. Cheap. Impossible to cheat. Of course, each citizen had the courage to announce their choice to the public at large (which most of us do today). I VOTED FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP!
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Posted 14 d ago
I hate vote by mail. I loved going into the voting booth.
Now we have people complaining they had to stand in line to exercise their Constitutional rights. Such simpletons not understanding the power they have.
And I, like CPT Jack Durish proudly announce I VOTED FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP! I know, shocking, right?
Now we have people complaining they had to stand in line to exercise their Constitutional rights. Such simpletons not understanding the power they have.
And I, like CPT Jack Durish proudly announce I VOTED FOR PRESIDENT TRUMP! I know, shocking, right?
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Bethina Lee
14 d
It's with the newer "Entitlement Mindset" that is going around...
I want to believe. I had seen Regan's time, this movement going..some professor had petitioned the president to excuse theirselves (college students) because they were going through a emotionally and mentally stressful time...
Lmao
Regan had hosted a news briefing and basically informed what the college students should do because of their emotional & mental well being
I want to believe. I had seen Regan's time, this movement going..some professor had petitioned the president to excuse theirselves (college students) because they were going through a emotionally and mentally stressful time...
Lmao
Regan had hosted a news briefing and basically informed what the college students should do because of their emotional & mental well being
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A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
14 d
YUP, And This Is The Guy Who'll Be Sitting At The Oak Desk In Our Oval Office.
https://youtu.be/FxgOR1KHCpQ
https://youtu.be/FxgOR1KHCpQ
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
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LTC David Brown
14 d
Bethina Lee - I remember getting off work about 17:30 hrs or so and stood in line until after 20:00 hrs, polls closed at 19:00. It was cold and rainy. Miserable, absolutely miserable.
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Edited 14 d ago
Posted 14 d ago
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.
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