Difference between revisions of "English Electric Computers"

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==External links==
 
==External links==
  
* [https://www.ourcomputerheritage.org/ Computer Conservation Society - Our Computer Heritage Project]
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* [https://www.ourcomputerheritage.org/Maincomp/Eel/eec_co.pdf English Electric Co. Ltd.]
** [https://www.ourcomputerheritage.org/Company%20histories%20rev%20Jan%202022.pdf British companies delivering digital computers in the period 1950–1965]
 
** [https://www.ourcomputerheritage.org/Maincomp/Eel/eec_co.pdf English Electric Co. Ltd.]
 
  
 
[[Category: Manufacturers]]
 
[[Category: Manufacturers]]

Revision as of 21:42, 23 February 2024

English Electric Computers was a British computer company, a subsidiary of English Electric, a large British industrial conglomerate producing airplanes, locomotives, etc.

In 1949, a group of English Electric personnel helped with the work on the Pilot ACE; this led to English Electric being able to produce a commercial version of the Pilot ACE, called DEUCE, in 1955; 33 were built.

In 1963, Lyons, the parent of Leo Computers (makers of the ground-breaking LEO) decided that Leo, although successful, was ancillary to their main business focus, so they decided to merge Leo Computers with English Electric's computer business, forming English Electric Leo Computers (Lyons exited in 1964).

In 1967, English Electric absorbed Elliott-Automation, and in 1968, as the final step in the wave of mergers which consolidated the British computer industry, it merged with International Computers and Tabulators (ICT) to form ICL.

Further reading

  • Martin Campbell-Kelly, ICL: A Business and Technical History, Clarendon, Oxford, 1989 - EEC coverage is scattered throughout; consult the index - the merger with ICT is covered in Chapter 12, pp. 255-264

External links