The article is both prophetic and ignorant, because the author is unaware of this Am. Stat. article from Aug 13, 1896, which states that already in 1896 there was at least one known collector. "There are pens and pens", it says, and then reveals that, "A British manufacturer has collected 1,608 styles, and he declares that most ailments in penmanship can be cured by certain pens".
But here's an earlier collector still, and in Denver, of all places. This intriguing, one-paragraph article appeared in the Scientific American, July 7, 1888, p.5, where it was indexed under the category "A collector of pens".
"Queer Fancy Of A Collector"
"A man in Denver, Colorado, named Lyon, is said to have a collection of over seven hundred pens, no two alike. Some are of steel, some gold, some amalgam, and so on. There are pens pointed fine enough to make lines of microscopic delicacy, and others intended for men who use the first person pronoun a great deal in their correspondence. The collection embraces specimens from England, Ireland, Scotland, Germany, and other European countries besides America and Canada. Some are in shapes like shovels, others resemble a section of stove pipe, and others are delicate and diminutive."
George Kovalenko.


.











