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The American Precision Museum is located in the renovated 1846 Robbins & Lawrence factory on South Main Street in Windsor, Vermont. The building is said to be the first U.S. factory at which precision interchangeable parts were made, giving birth to the precision machine tool industry.
American Precision Museum: 1966 Windsor: Vermont United States No ASME brochure available 120: 1987 Robbins & Lawrence Machine Shop Site of first machine shop to achieve interchangeable manufacture on a practical scale. 1846 Windsor: Vermont United States ASME brochure: 121 1987 Holly Fire Protection and Water System
American Museum of Fly Fishing: Manchester: Bennington: Sports: History of angling, including rods, reels, flies, tackle, art, photographs, manuscripts and books American Precision Museum: Windsor: Windsor: Industry: Historically significant machine tools and techniques of precision manufacturing Barnard Historical Society Museum: Barnard ...
The American Precision Museum's biography of Rudolph Bannow [2] reports that he conceived the design in 1936 as the logical machine on which to mount the milling head already being built by the Bridgeport Pattern and Model Works (which he owned with a partner Magnus Wahlstrom). The first Bridgeport milling machine (serial number 1) is on ...
American Precision Museum (1982), "Ambrose Swasey (1846–1937)", Machine Tool Hall of Fame, American Precision Museum, archived from the original on 2011-07-19 Warner & Swasey Company (1920), The Warner & Swasey Company, 1880–1920 , Cleveland, Ohio: Warner & Swasey Company .
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American Precision Museum; V. Vermont Granite Museum; Vermont Marble Museum This page was last edited on 12 February 2017, at 15:44 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
The American Precision Museum's biography of Rudolph Bannow [2] reports that he conceived the iconic Bridgeport ram-and-turret, knee-and-column design in 1936 as the logical machine on which to mount the milling head already being built by the company. In 1938 they began selling whole milling machines.