Brother logo underneath a Majestic-400 typewriter
Monday, January 20, 2025

Portable typewriters: The Majestic-400

by Annabel Chow
The entirety of the Majestic-400 with its case

The Majestic-400

The Majestic-400 or otherwise known as a JP-1 generation typewriter, is a product of Brother Industries Limited. When you first encounter this typewriter, it takes its form in a slightly rusted yet humble teal box, complete with a handle at the top. To the unassuming eye, you could mistake it for a lunchbox, or for the more ambitious-minded, a suitcase. And indeed, does it hold treasures the same way a lunchbox or suitcase would, however, from a much different time.

If you鈥檙e much like me and can鈥檛 resist the temptation to open Pandora's box, or the typewriter, you鈥檒l be pleasantly surprised to find that the Majestic-400 is indeed all majestic and operational. It matches the case with the same proud teal colour and pearly white keys to complement its hue. The body is scattered with all types of little scratches, labels, and an edge of rust. While the label has shifted and faded, it beams at you from the center of the machine, Majestic 400. And along the chipped paint, you can find a worn sticker reading 鈥淐ommended by Parents Magazine, as advertised therein.鈥 Clearly, this machine held weight- both physically (it's heavier than it looks) and historically. What ever happened to the machine which once held its prized title in the Parents Magazine?

Front view of the Majestic 400 case

Typing sample

A typing sample of all the available characters to use on the Majestic 400

A typing sample of all the available characters to use on the Majestic 400

A production line for typewriters

A production line for typewriters. Image courtesy of the Brother museum.

A History on Brother

The story begins in Nagoya, Japan, 1908, where a local sewing repair business, 鈥淵asui Sewing Machine Co,鈥 was established. Kanekichi Yasui, the founder of this company, would eventually pass on this title to his two sons, Masayoshi and Jitsuichi. The brothers did quite well in their new role, eventually surpassing both the technology and achievements of their father鈥檚 time. Aside from just sewing machines, the company had also made washing machines, refrigerators, electric fans, and motorbikes. Eventually the company had outgrown their original name and decided to rebrand as 鈥淏rother Industries Limited.鈥

The brothers Jitsuichi (left) and Masayoshi (right) Yasui, the founders of Brother Industries, Ltd.

The brothers Jitsuichi (left) and Masayoshi (right) Yasui, the founders of Brother Industries, Ltd.

By the 1950s, Brother鈥檚 technology had reached the homes of Americans, and soon after that, a request for a typewriter followed. A simple thing really, yet it took Brother from 1958 to 1961 to finish perfecting their first line of JP-1 typewriters. While I won鈥檛 go over the details of every typewriter they鈥檝e made, there was one thing that made the Brothers typewriter so successful: it was for the people. By the 1960s, typewriters were an everyday object, used for school, business, work, and leisure. The Brother鈥檚 typewriter was not only portable, given its suitcase like appearance and relatively unbulky build, but affordable, being 30% cheaper than most American typewriters. Despite the ingenuity of Brother鈥檚 typewriters, their significance has largely been overshadowed by the company鈥檚 success with their newer cutting-edge products. Today, Brother manufactures computer printers, and almost 11% of the market are Brother machines, chugging away in homes and offices across the globe.

The print from a high-speed dot-matrix Brother printer circa 1971

The Majestic 400 Today

One thing you can truly enjoy about a typewriter over the modern electronic and white-shelled printer, is that the machine feels alive. When you first open that Pandora鈥檚 box, it bares its teeth at you. In this case, all 50 of its shiny metal teeth, tightly packaged into a semi-circle. Yet these typebars are what makes the typewriter work. Like the ribs of a lung, you watch as the typewriter breathes your letters into words, and those words into meaning. It does this by stamping the inked ribbon nested in front of the type-guide. Each typebar contains 2 characters, which can be adjusted using the keyboard. Not only does the act of pressing down a key shift the ribbon high enough to be stamped, but it also selects which character on the typebar is used. While the keyboard, typebars, and ribbon work as a stamp system, the upper half of the typewriter has the important task of keeping the paper in place. The part which holds the paper is known as a carriage. With its wind-up mechanism, it adjusts to every click of the machine. A little to the left, a little to the right鈥 No- up. Down?

The Majestic 400 from the side
A side view of the Majestic-400  typewriter and a front view of the same typewriter

At the end of the day, when the machine finally spits your paper back at you, curled and ink-stained, you鈥檒l be pleasantly surprised to receive a wonderful little paper that is truly yours. Rather than the perfect #FFFFFF white of a Word or Google Document, you鈥檇 find words stamped with x鈥檚, misalignments, missing letters, and a few typos too many. Yet it鈥檚 undeniably yours, complete with the hiccups of a clumsy hand and whatnot. The Majestic-400 embraces these imperfections, turning them into the very charm that makes typewriters so captivating today.

If you'd like to try out the Majestic-400, you can find it in our Computer Museum located in DC 1316, open Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 10:30 am to 5:00 pm, and Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm.

About the Author

Annabel is a Psychology student at the University of 蓝莓视频 and is the Computer Museum鈥檚 Winter 2025 co-op student. In her free time, she enjoys playing video games, guitar, and baking.聽