Inventor of the first commercially successful ballpoint pen
Spouse
Elsa Schick
Children
Mariana Bíró
Signature
László József Bíró (Hungarian pronunciation:[ˈlaːsloːˈjoːʒɛfˈbiːroː]; néSchweiger; 29 September 1899 – 24 October 1985), Hispanicized as Ladislao José Biro, was a Hungarian-Argentine inventor who patented the first commercially successful modern ballpoint pen. The first ballpoint pen had been invented roughly 50 years earlier by John J. Loud, but it was not a commercial success.
While working as a journalist, Bíró noticed that the ink used in newspaper printing dried quickly, leaving the paper dry and smudge-free. He tried using the same ink in a fountain pen, but found that it would not flow into the tip, as it was too viscous. In 1930 he observed children playing with marbles in a puddle, noticing that the marbles left a trail of water in their wake. This gave him an idea: Why not use a ball-shaped metal nib for writing, which became the initial design idea for the ball pen.
Bíró presented the first production of the ballpoint pen at the Budapest International Fair in 1931.[1] Working with his brother György,[5][6] a chemist, he developed a new tip consisting of a ball that was free to turn in a socket, and as it turned it would pick up a special viscous ink from a cartridge and then roll to deposit it on the paper. Bíró patented the invention in Paris in 1938.
During World War II, Bíró fled the Nazis with his brother. They relocated to Argentina in 1943 at the invitation of the President of Argentina, Agustin Justo, who met the inventor in Yugoslavia while on vacation, noticing the unusual writing implement.[7] On 17 June 1943, the brothers filed another patent, issued in the US as 2,390,636 Writing Instrument,[8] and formed Biro Pens of Argentina (in Argentina the ballpoint pen is known as birome, a portmanteau of the brothers' surname with that of their business partner, Juan Jorge Meyne). This new design was supposedly licensed for production in the United Kingdom for supply to Royal Air Force aircrew.[9]
In 1945, Marcel Bich bought the patent from Bíró for the pen, which soon became the main product of his company Bic. Bic has sold more than 100 billion ballpoint pens worldwide. In November of that same year, promoter Milton Reynolds introduced a gravity-fed pen to the US market, to try to get around Biro's patent, which was based on capillary action, where fresh ink is drawn out of the reservoir of the pen as ink is deposited on the paper. Because the Reynolds workaround depended on a gravity feed, it did not infringe, but required thinner ink and a larger barrel.[10] The Reynolds Pen was successful for a few years until its reputation for leaking and competition from established pen manufacturers overtook it.[citation needed]
Death
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László Bíró died in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on October 24, 1985.[7]
Legacy
A ballpoint pen is widely referred to as a "biro" in many countries, including the UK, Ireland, Australia and Italy.[11][12] Although the word is a registered trademark, in some countries it has become genericised.
Argentina's Inventors' Day is celebrated on Bíró's birthday, 29 September. On 29 September 2016, the 117th anniversary of his birth, Google commemorated Bíró with a Google Doodle for "his relentless, forward-thinking spirit".[13]
^Hargittai, Istvan; Hargittai, Balazs (2023). "Ladislao José Biro". Brilliance in Exile: The Diaspora of Hungarian Scientists from John von Neumann to Katalin Karikó. Central European University Press. pp. 154–156. doi:10.7829/j.ctv2vdbvm7. ISBN978-963-386-607-8. JSTOR10.7829/j.ctv2vdbvm7.