Discovery of Cold War-era rare Eastern Bloc computers in a German hangar
5 hours ago
- #WWII History
- #Historical Technology
- #Museum Acquisition
- On July 26, 2006, CHM curator Dag Spicer received an email about a lost trove of rare computers in a warehouse in Castrop-Rauxel, Germany, leading to an investigation.
- CHM curators visited and found a vast warehouse filled with hundreds of historical computing artifacts from the 1930s to the 1980s, including Eastern Bloc systems and German/European computing systems.
- They implemented a grid system to catalog the warehouse's contents, discovering media, documents, and hardware like mainframes, minicomputers, disk drives, and plotters.
- The collection was believed to have been assembled by Professor Walter Ameling from RWTH Aachen University, with many items bearing marks from the Computer Museum of Aachen (CMA).
- Over a ten-day visit, curators evaluated over 1,000 objects against CHM's holdings, selecting items to avoid duplication and ensure significance, resulting in 2,056 artifacts acquired, now part of 'the SAP Collection.'
- Significant shipping costs for seven tractor-trailers were covered by CHM Trustee Ike Nassi, requiring CHM to expand its storage with a new climate-controlled facility.
- During the visit, a live 500-pound Allied bomb was discovered nearby and safely dismantled, highlighting the historical danger of the WWII-era site.
- The discovery is considered one of the world's great amateur computing collections, preserved at CHM as a reflection of computing's past.