INSTALLING OF A NATIONAL 405 COMPUTER AT DANSOM LANE (1959) film no: 3833
This film documents the installation of the first NE 405 computer in Hull. In March, 1959, it was installed at the firm Reckitt & Sons Ltd which, at the time, produced various cleaning products. The film features the arrival of the computer to the Dansom Lane facilities, installation, and initial testing of the system.
Title - RECKITT & SONS LTD present NE 405
The film opens with an image of the punch card and the National Elliott 405 at Reckitt's. It's 8:08 am when the trucks arrive at Rickett and Sons. At the loading bay, men in white lab coats begin to unload the cargo from the trucks and move them into the building. Some of the men gather around a large wooden crate which holds one of the main hardware components of the computer. A large vent has been installed inside to keep the room cool where all the large circuit boards will be held.
Back outside, some of the men are on a forklift in order to lift them high enough to remove sides of the wooden crates from the larger pieces of the system. These sides are removed to reveal the large circuit boards. It takes about 5-6 men to push these pieces inside the building. Inside, the men in lab coats stand on ladders and connect the numerous wires of the different circuit boards.
Inside, two men inspect a part of the computer that looks like an engine. Back in the circuit room, a man lays down on the floor to connect the lower wires.
More components of the computer are brought into the building. Two men wait at the door opening on the second floor of the building. Down below, pieces of the computer system are secured to a crane. The crane lifts these pieces of machinery up to the second floor where the other men pull it towards the building to unload.
Inside, a man sits and watches a part of the computer which looks like a patch panel. At the main station, another man begins to feed some of the paper punch card strips through the system. Some of the lights on the front of the computer light up as the information is processed.
Four business men sit around a table for a meeting. This is followed by a shot of the Programmer's office door. Inside on a blackboard, there is a flow-chard for Daily Cash. One of the programmers is sitting at his desk which is covered in paperwork including many diagrams.
In other parts of the building, a woman sits at a punch card machine to input data. There is a close up of the machine which punches the holes into the strips of paper which will be fed into the computer. These strips of paper are given to another lady to take for processing. The strips are run through a system which has two large film reel-like wheels at the bottom. Once the data is processed, the information is printed out. A woman in a lab coat stands at the printer awaiting the results. Some of these results include order forms with list different products and quantities needed.
The film closes with the following titles: produced by C.R. Redfearn - The End.
This work fed into the first commercial computer being built by Ferranti, the Mark I, in 1951 – Stan Augurten provides a good summary of these developments, although with a heavy US focus. Unfortunately Turing did not live to see the fruits of his work, committing suicide in 1954 by eating a poisoned apple (laced with cyanide), becoming a famous logo. As a gay man he had been convicted of ‘gross indecency’ in 1952 and sentenced to chemical castration (oestrogen) – homosexuality for men over 21, ‘in private’, only ceased to be illegal in England and Wales in 1967 (Gordon Brown made a rather belated governmental apology for Turing’s treatment in 2009).
According to Copeland the 405 sold somewhere between 16 and 50 (References, p. 167), although the Our Computer Heritage website puts the number built as 30. It would have cost something in the region of £125,000. The NRDC purchased an Elliott 405 for installation at Siemens Ltd telephone works at Woolwich and the National Cash Register also bought one in 1959, to be used in calculating its pay, pensions and statistics. The Powerhouse Museum in Australia has parts from a National Elliott 405 that arrived from England, also in 1959.



3 Comments
I was employed by National Cash Register company starting in 1957. I worked from their office on Marylebone Rd in London and was trained for the installation and maintenance of the National Elliott 405 computer at Boreham Wood, London. After the course I was one of a team that commissioned a 405 machine destined to be sent for installation in Altrincham, Manchester. The commissioning took several weeks and consisted mainly of omitted and miss-connected circuit wiring in the computer equipment bays.
At Altrincham, we installed and recommissioned this large machine in a circular glass and aluminium building constructed on the foundation of a disused gas holder at the North Western Gas Board's coal gas plant which was then not operational. After about eighteen months work the computer was operational and turning out gas bills for the greater Manchester area.
I was assigned the responsibility as a trouble shooter for the line-a-time printers in the North of England. In doing this work, I spent about a week at the Reckitt and Coleman building on Damson Lane where I had the enviable task of taking each of the young ladies who were tasked with transferring data to punched tape that was used for machine input.
Any response would be most welcome.
Elliott Bros (as they were still known in 1961 despite the change of official name) used the 405 to run its own payroll at its factory in Boreham Wood. It took nearly 24 hours and required three shifts to cover the operation. The computer was also used for processing other work but being a lowly trainee straight from A-levels I never found out what they all were.
9
Post new comment