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New Englander and Yale Review
May 1856
We remember being counseled ,
by the professor of Rhetoric, in college, never in writing to arrest a
fee flow of thought, in order to look out a word in the dictionary, but
to write on and correct the dictation afterwards. The reason assigned
was that a writer should take advantage of the concentration and glow
of his mind, and not suffer it to become cooled and disteractred while
he investigates a question of language. For the same reason we prize "Prince's
Fountain Pen." It helps us to avail ourselves of the mind's best
moods for composition. It is also an economist of time, soon repaying,
by its saving it this respect, its original cost. A recent improvement
has obviated our early objections to it, which arose from the insufficiency
of the flow of ink. This difficulty no longer exists, the writer being
able by means of a new, ingenious contrivance, to regulate this flow at
pleasure. No Clergyman, we think, who gives it as this improved, a fair
trial, coule ever be induced to relinquish it; no man, indeed, whose literary
or commercial pursuits require him to write, hour after hour
"Prince's Protean Ink Fountain Pen," 271 Broadway, corner of
Chambers Street, New York
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From the Boston Globe, 6 September 1908:
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MINISTER INVENTED THE FOUNTAIN PEN
It was a New England clergyman, Rev. Newell Anderson Prince, a Congregational
minister of exceptional ability and rare mental attainments, who
conceived, invented, and had patented the first fountain pen. Mr.
Prince was a direct descendant of Rev. John Prince, an Oxford scholar
and church of England clergyman of East Sheffield, England, who was
the ancestor of Rev. Thomas Prince, who came to America in 1623, and
became first pastor of the Old South church in Boston. He was the
son of Paul and Abigail (Reed) Prince and one of three sons, all of
whom were graduates of the North Yarmouth academy and of Bowdoin college.
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One of his brothers was Rev. William Reed Prince of the class of ‘40,
Bowdoin, the same year that Rev.Newell A Prince graduated, and who was
also a Congregational minister of great ability. The other brother was
Howard Lyman Prince, who fought in the Mexican, Indian and civil wars,
and who was made judge advocate on Gen. Chamberlain’s staff.
After the war he was principal of the high school in Portland, Maine,
and later studied law and practiced in Washington for many years. When
Rev. Mr. Prince graduated from Bowdoin, he took a four years’ course
in the Bangor theological seminary, graduating in 1844. Before actively
taking up his ministerial duties, Mr. Prince taught school in Freeport,
Falmouth and Bath, Maine, Paris, Kentucky, and Milltown, New Brunswick.
In 1847, he became
pastor of the Congregational church in New Gloucester, Maine but later
went to Milltown, New Brunswick. He was during his life the pastor of
churches in Boston, Brooklyn, Paterson, NJ, Bethel, Conn, Orange Mass.,
Union Springs, NY, Binghampton, NY, Simsbury, Conn., New Haven, Cornwall,
Conn., Enfield, Conn., Auburn, Mass, and West Suffield, Conn.
It was when Mr. Prince was a student at Bowdoin that the idea of the Fountain
pen came to him. Shorthand writing was at that time in its infancy, and
Mr. Prince, with his brothers and Daniel Temple, who afterward became
a clergyman and missionary, took up the study of shorthand together. After
a time Mr. Prince discovered, however, when he had reached the stage in
this study of taking from dictation, that the constant dipping of the
pen was not
only a loss in speed, but it left him at times with a stenographic character
half
formed. Wishing to excel in this new method of condensing the English
language, it occurred to him then, that, if a self-feeding pen could be
devised,
where there would be a constant flow of ink, regulated to suit the needs
of the writer, writing of shorthand characters would be greatly simplified,
with the result of greater speed and accuracy. He studied over it for
several months without telling any of his student friends of his hopes.
He tried many experiments, all of which were failures, but he was a persistent
youth, and his ingenuity won.
His first successful pen was very crude, but it worked. He went to a local
tinsmith and had made for him a barrel of tin about half an inch in diameter
at
the top and tapering to three-eighths of an inch at the bottom. It was
12 inches in length and very clumsy to handle. At the smaller end he made
an indentation in such a way that a pen could be inserted. The pens in
those days were flat, and it was a flat steel pen that he used in his
first tin penholder. He filled the barrel with ink and in the top he placed
a cork with a vent hole in it to allow for the admission of air. The indentation
at the bottom was made in such a way that the flow of ink was regulated
by the tightness with which the pen was inserted. He first tried it in
his room secretly and found that it worked well, and the next day, to
the amusement of every one in the study room, he produced his tinbarreled
fountain pen and proceeded to do his work..
It is said that this was in 1839, the year before Mr. Prince graduated.
At any rate, it caused a mild sensation, and several of the students were
soon provided with this tin fountain pen, and used them in their work
in the class rooms. This was the first fountain pen of which there is
any record and to Bowdoin college falls the honor of its birthplace.
For several months the possibility of a fountain pen of commercial value
did
not occur to this inventive genius, but it soon found lodgment just before
his
graduation and he began the task of perfecting it with the idea of securing
a patent on it at Washington. All through his four years in the Bangor
theological seminary, while he was a teacher and pastor in several places,
he kept this
idea in mind and worked to perfect his invention, but it was not until
1830 that he had overcome all the obstacles and was ready to ask for his
patent papers.
His first commercial pen had a silver barrel about 8 inches long and
three-eights of an inch in diameter. In one side of this barrel there
was an opening
about two inches long and three-eights of an inch wide, over which was
placed a flexible rubber tube and steel spring. The barrel being filled
with ink, the
pressure of the thumb on the steel spring, which in turn pressed on the
rubber tube, regulated the flow of ink. It was a complicated affair of
several parts but it worked well.
On September 30, 1851, Mr. Prince took out his first patent. He called
it the “Prince Protean Fountain Pen,” or changeable pen. As
an inventor Mr. Prince was a success, but of business he knew little.
Immersed in his books, his studies, his writings and his inventions, he
had no idea of business, and, like many of good clergymen and inventors,
he was all at sea when he began his search for the means to manufacture
and to place his invention on the market.
He went to live in Brooklyn, and while there filled many Brooklyn pulpits,
and became the close friend of such men as Henry Ward Beecher, Rev Lyman
Abbott, and other noted New York clergymen. He was for a time Mr. Beecher’s
supply in the pulpit of Plymouth Church. In 1854 he met by accident Mr.
Thomas G. Stearns, who was at the time a New York merchant, but who afterwards
amassed a fortune in railroad building and construction work. Mr. Stearns
is alive today, and although 92 years old is as strong and active as a
man of 60. ...
“He was a remarkable man in many ways,” Stearns said to
the Globe man. “He was a splendid preacher and inventor, but he
had absolutely no idea of business. If he had been a good business man
there is no doubt at all but that he would have made a tremendous fortune
out of his pen.”
Mr. Stearns had faith in the “Prince Protean Fountain Pen”
and although Mr. Prince retained but 1-16th of his interest in the invention,
Mr. Stearns and John C. Clark, who was engaged in the manufacture of pencil
cases in New York, agreed to finance a company to exploit Mr. Prince’s
invention. The company was known as the Prince Pen Co. And Mr. Stearns
became the manager.
Mr. Prince was pastor of a Congregational church in Auburn, Mass, from
1879 until 1883 and went from that place to West Suffield, Conn, taking
charge of a church in that place. He died there April 5, 1887, aged 72.
During his life he published a volume of sermons and wrote and published
the memoirs of his brother, Rev. William Reed Prince, besides contributing
largely to current Congregational literature and discussions. His volume
entitle “Being
to Be,” a work on immortality, was widely read at the time of its
publication.
Mr. Prince married Mrs. Mary R. Burnham of Brooklyn, and when he died
he was survived by a wife and daughter, the later, Miss Maybelle Oakes
Prince,
is now living in Springfield, Mass. She has inherited much of her father’s
literary ability and charm and is well known in that city as a writer
on sociological subjects being a frequent contributor to current
literature.

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