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A Bavarian-American Mechanical Inventor
Charles August Fey
FEBRUARY 9, 1862 · VÖHRINGEN, BAVARIA · NOVEMBER 10, 1944 · SAN FRANCISCO
The youngest of fifteen children, a runaway apprentice, a self-taught
instrument-maker who arrived in San Francisco at the age of twenty-three with
little more than mechanical instinct — and who would, before the century turned,
forever alter the precision-engineering landscape of the American West.
❦ ❦ ❦
— I. Origins
From Vöhringen to the world.
Born on February 9, 1862, in the small Bavarian village of Vöhringen,
Charles August Fey came into a household already brimming with life — he was the
fifteenth and youngest child of a schoolmaster. The mechanical aptitude that would
later define his career emerged early; by fourteen, he had apprenticed himself to a
farm-tool maker, and by sixteen, he had taken work in a Munich instrument factory
where he labored alongside craftsmen who built scientific apparatus and intricate
timepieces.
At eighteen, he moved to England, finding employment with a maritime engineering
firm in Plymouth. The work suited him — but the dampness of the
English climate did not. A bout of severe tuberculosis sent him searching for drier
air, and in 1885, after brief stops in Paris and New Jersey, he
boarded a train across the American continent and arrived in San Francisco.
He was twenty-three. He spoke imperfect English, knew no one, and had only the
clothes he traveled in and a small case of tools. Within weeks he had found work
with the California Electric Works, where the city's growing demand
for telephones, intercom systems, and electrical instrumentation gave him steady
employment — and a workshop in which to develop his own ideas.
❦
— II. The San Francisco Years
A workshop, a city, a moment.
San Francisco in the late 1880s was an extraordinary place to be a mechanic.
The city was less than four decades old, still flush with mining money and absurdly
rich in newcomers. Telegraph hill was a tangle of wires; cable cars threaded the
avenues; precision instrument-making, clockwork, and electrical engineering
converged in the workshops of Market Street and South of Market.
Fey thrived. He married Marie Christine Volkmar in 1889, and
together they built a household on Berkeley's Allston Way and later in the city
itself. By 1894, he had left wage employment behind and founded his
own workshop, where he designed mechanical devices on commission and developed
several inventions of his own — coin-operated mechanisms being a particular
fascination of the era.
The technical problem that consumed him was deceptively simple: how to design a
fully self-contained automatic payout mechanism — a machine that
could verify its own internal state and dispense the appropriate response without
human intervention. The mechanism he produced in 1895, which he
called the Liberty Bell, became one of the most influential mechanical
designs of the late nineteenth century, copied widely for decades thereafter.
❦ ❦ ❦
Birth
1862
Vöhringen, Bavaria — youngest of 15 children of a village schoolmaster.
Arrived San Francisco
1885
Aged 23, with mechanical training from Munich, Plymouth, and Paris.
Liberty Bell
1895
First fully automatic payout mechanism — entirely mechanical, no electricity.
Death
1944
San Francisco, aged 82. Survived by four children and many grandchildren.
"
He was a tinkerer in the great American tradition —
not an industrialist, not a financier, but a man
who simply wanted to build the next thing.
— Marshall Fey, grandson, in his 1983 family biography
— III. A Life in Brief
Timeline.
1862
Born in Vöhringen, Bavaria
Fifteenth child of a village schoolmaster. Christened August Fey; later anglicized to Charles after emigrating.
1876
Apprenticed to a farm-tool maker
At fourteen, began formal mechanical training that would define his career.
1880
Moves to Plymouth, England
Works for a maritime engineering firm. Severe tuberculosis prompts his eventual move to drier climates.
1885
Arrives in San Francisco
After short stays in Paris and New Jersey. Joins California Electric Works as a mechanic.
1889
Marries Marie Christine Volkmar
The couple would have four children together.
1894
Opens his own workshop
Begins independent invention and contract mechanical work in San Francisco.
1895
Builds the Liberty Bell mechanism
His most famous invention — a fully automatic, three-reel mechanical device. Refused to patent it; chose to lease the design instead.
1906
The Great Earthquake
Fey's workshop on Market Street was destroyed in the fire that followed. He rebuilt within months.
1909
California outlaws his most famous device
He pivots to other mechanical inventions, including improvements to coin-operated trade stimulators and automatic vending mechanisms.
1944
Dies in San Francisco
Aged 82. His original Liberty Bell prototype is held today by his descendants; replicas reside in the Nevada State Museum and the Smithsonian collections.
— IV. The Inventor's Method
A man obsessed with simplicity.
Those who knew him in his San Francisco workshop described Fey as quiet,
methodical, and impatient with ornament. Where his contemporaries built
elaborate machines that disguised their workings behind ornate cabinets, Fey
designed for the inverse: he wanted every internal mechanism to be inspectable,
repairable, and — when something broke — diagnosable in seconds.
His three-reel design solved an engineering problem that had stumped the trade
for years. Earlier machines required a human operator to confirm a winning
combination; Fey's machine could read its own internal state via a
cleverly arranged set of mechanical pawls and stops, and dispense
its payout entirely through gravity, springs, and the precise timing of a single
spring-loaded lever.
He famously refused to patent the Liberty Bell, reasoning — in a decision that
would cost his estate considerable wealth — that once a patent was filed,
a clever competitor could simply alter one detail and circumvent it. He
chose instead to lease his machines outright, retaining ownership and a share of
revenue. Within a decade, knockoffs appeared across the country, and Fey's
leasing business never grew to the scale his invention deserved.
📜 A note on context
The Liberty Bell mechanism Charles Fey designed in 1895 was, technically, a
coin-operated trade stimulator — a category of mechanical device that
occupied an ambiguous legal status in late-19th-century America. Its descendants
became the modern slot machine, and as a result, Fey's name is most commonly
encountered in histories of the gambling industry.
This archive treats Fey as what he was first and foremost: a
mechanical inventor of the late Gilded Age, working in a city
that prized engineering ingenuity. We do not promote, link to, or endorse
gambling in any form. The historical record is the record; how we choose to
engage with the technologies that descend from it is a separate matter.
— V. Legacy
A name preserved in the archives.
Charles August Fey is buried in Cypress Lawn Memorial Park in
Colma, California. His original 1895 Liberty Bell prototype — the only one
ever built by his own hand — remained in the family for more than a century
and is now part of the Marshall Fey collection. Replicas exist in the
Nevada State Museum, the Smithsonian, and a
handful of historical engineering archives.
He left behind four children, twelve grandchildren, and a body of mechanical
work whose precision still inspires students of late-19th-century engineering.
In 1980, the State of Nevada placed a historical marker in
his memory; in 2005, the City of San Francisco recognized the
site of his Market Street workshop with a small bronze plaque.
He is remembered, when he is remembered at all, as a man who solved a
mechanical puzzle that no one else had managed to solve — and who, in doing
so, accidentally invented an industry he did not live to see grow large.