The Daily Telegraph

Evelyn Berezin

Designer who created the first computeris­ed word processor

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EVELYN BEREZIN, who has died aged 93, was a computer designer and businesswo­man who created the first computeris­ed word processor. The Data Secretary, a typewriter with word-processing capability, consisted of a unit 40in high with an IBM Selectric typewriter as the keyboard. The unit contained 13 semiconduc­tor chips, some of which were designed by Evelyn Berezin herself.

Beyond secretarie­s, the business world – particular­ly technology – was a lonely place for a woman in the 1950s and 1960s, and even in 1976, when she had been working for a quarter of a century, Evelyn Berezin was the US’S only head of a tech company.

She was born in New York, in the Bronx, on April 12 1925, the daughter of Russian Jewish immigrants. Her father, Sam, was a furrier, her mother, Rose (née Berman), a seamstress.

A lover of science fiction from an early age, Evelyn graduated in Physics from New York University. Although she began working on a doctorate there, funded by a fellowship from the US Atomic Energy Commission, in 1951 she joined the Electronic Computer Corporatio­n, the company’s only woman.

“They said to me, ‘Design a computer,’ she recalled. “I had never seen one before. Hardly anyone else had. So I just had to figure out how to do it. It was a lot of fun – when I wasn’t terrified.”

An early machine she devised was a computer for the US Defense Department to assist in artillery-aiming.

In 1959 she joined a company called Teleregist­er, for whom she designed several computers, including machines to manage company accounts, to enable computeris­ed banking, to monitor how much money was spent on each horse at racecourse­s, and building the first automated airline reservatio­ns system for United Airlines, which had a one-second response time and operated for 11 years without any systems failures.

In 1968 she began working on her word processor, and the following year, with two male colleagues and $750,000 backing, she founded Redactron on a Long Island industrial estate to sell the Data Secretary. The first advertisem­ent, in Ms magazine, declared “the death of the dead-end secretary.”

There were a few early problems, she recalled. When a prototype was put on display for the press in a New York hotel, the weather was dry and there was a build-up of static electricit­y in the machine.

“To our horror it was a dry day and the engineers were setting this non-working machine up for our big story,” Evelyn Berezin recalled. “Ed Wolf, our head of engineerin­g, brought a full pail of water and without a word to anyone throws the pail of water over the whole thick carpet in the room. The water sank into the carpet, which stayed damp for three or four hours, and the machine worked perfectly.”

Later versions of Redactron word processors came with monitor screens, printers, more memory, smaller consoles and faster processing speeds. About 10,000 machines were sold for $8,000 each before the company ran into financial problems thanks to rising interest rates, and in 1976 Evelyn Berezin sold up to the Burroughs corporatio­n, continuing as president of its new Redactron division until 1980.

It was not a happy marriage, however: “I was not one of them,” she recalled. “I told them what I thought – a loud woman they did not know how to deal with. So they disconnect­ed and so did I.”

From then until 1987 she was president of Greenhouse Management, a venture capital company that invested in technology start-ups, and she also worked as a consultant.

In 1951 Evelyn Berezin married Israel Wilenitz, a chemical engineer from London. He died in 2003; they had no children.

Evelyn Berezin, born April 12 1925, died December 8 2018

 ??  ?? Evelyn Berezin with the Data Secretary: she sold 10,000
Evelyn Berezin with the Data Secretary: she sold 10,000

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