LEO editor

100 notebooks, quarto, compiled in manuscript, dating from 1949 to the early 1950s. The notebooks have been donated to the LEO Computers Society by Paul and David Lenaerts, Ernest’s sons, and have been scanned into digital format by Bill Purvis, a member of the Computer Conservation s They can be viewed at http://www.billp.org/LEO

Ernest Lenaerts  Read More »

Wally’s daughter Andrea has donated her father’s collection of LEO memorabilia including published papers dating back to 1954, newspqper articles and photographs
There are many other private hoards and the LEO Computers Society would welcome information about such holdings.

Wally Dutton Read More »

J. Lyons donated some LEO I items to the Museum in 1965. Documentation relating to the donation is held by Peter Byford of the LEO Computers Society, and photographs of LEO I hardware items are held by Chris Burton of the Computer Conservation Society. The items themselves are currently (October 2018) not available for viewing whilst a major refurbishment of the Museum is taking place..

 Birmingham Museum   Read More »

The Museum opened a new Gallery The Information Age, which features amongst other exhibits tracing the evolution of the information age, a special section devoted to LEO, including recordings of a teashop manageress reflecting on the changes the Teashop Job (L3) made to her life. The new Gallery is sponsored by a number of members of the IT industry and organized and managed by Dr Tilly Blyth of the Science Museum. The Science Museum website includes in its section on computing, a comprehensive account of the LEO story including photographs. See meet-leo-worlds-first-business-computer LEO items held are displayed at Collection_of_LEO_Items

Science Museum, London.  Read More »

founded in 2003 is a small museum which aims to preserve the history of computing, to be used as a valuable educational resource and as an information repository for historians, collectors and the media, and to illustrate this history in an entertaining way. Its collection includes a LEO magnetic tape reel. It can see it on display on this view in a virtual tour on their website.

The Swindon Museum of Computer History, Read More »