Bell & Howell
Bell & Howell Company is an American firm originally established as a manufacturer of motion picture cameras, projectors, lenses, and related film equipment, founded in February 1907 in Chicago, Illinois, by Donald J. Bell, a salesman, and Albert S. Howell, an inventor and projectionist, with initial capital of $5,000 focused on producing, leasing, and repairing movie machinery.[1][2]
The company quickly addressed early film industry challenges by developing standardized 35mm equipment that reduced flickering and established uniform film widths, thereby helping to set industry standards, and introduced key innovations including the first all-metal motion picture camera in 1912—a durable model produced for over four decades—and the first spring-driven 16mm camera in 1923, alongside pioneering portable home movie cameras in the 1920s that democratized amateur filmmaking.[1][3][2]
Bell & Howell became a leading supplier to Hollywood studios, contributed optical gear such as gun cameras during World War II, and earned recognition for technical excellence, including its inaugural Academy Award in 1951 from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, followed by additional Oscars in 1975 and 1981 for advancements in film printing and tape systems.[4][1]
Over decades, the firm diversified beyond cinema into microfilm readers, educational technologies, mail processing systems, and eventually digital imaging and automation services, peaking at wartime sales of $21.9 million in 1945 and employing thousands in the Chicago area by the 1970s, though its enduring legacy centers on transforming motion picture technology from niche professional tools to accessible consumer products.[1][3]