My shipment from the U.K. arrived Wednesday, it was shipped on Monday! While continuing my endless search for old projectors for my museum, I came across an early Simplex machine located near Liverpool U.K. in the hands of a private collector. He had an auction in 2021 selling off his collection of machines and this one did not meet minimum bid. I was able to strike a deal on it (well below some of the asking prices for contemporary machines on epay!) Then I found a packing / shipping house to pick up the machine, pack it and ship it via UPS air freight to my doorstep. It is serial #479, 1912 (the 379th one made ) It has an early ID plate 'PAT. APPLD FOR' and the original Motion Picture Patents ID tag! According to the Projected Picture Trust, a historical group in the U.K., it is the earliest one known there and they have one also that is in the 600 serial range from 1912, they have records showing approx a dozen Simplex machines were imported in 1912 by Kineto, and were equipped with Kineto arc lamps and installed in the U.K.s larger venues. This machine is believed to have been installed in the Argyle Theatre of the Varieties near Liverpool, a 500+ seat house that was built in the late half of the 1800s and ran the first motion pictures in the U.K. around 1896, The Simplex (with Kineto lamp) was installed at the Argyle around 1912-1913 while the theatre went through a major renovation. It was used as a single machine until sound came in the 1920s and it was retired. The Argyle ran live shows with film interludes was destroyed by bombing during WW2. Dick Prather had a machine like mine in the 600 serial range, I believe it is now residing in a museum in Portland. The only earlier model Simplex existing I believe is Cary Williams very early machine in the 100 serial range that was made in 1911 and has a silod door with no glass. In my research, the solid doors were only on the first 150 machines, then the half glass was used until approx 1913 when the full glass was used, The full glass was trademarked and design patented in 1914. This rare machine is the center of my Simplex exhibit! Thanks to all that helped in this endeaver.
SS479B.JPG SS479C.JPG SS479D.JPG SS479F.JPG
SS479B.JPG SS479C.JPG SS479D.JPG SS479F.JPG
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