{"id":34583,"date":"2025-11-20T11:28:29","date_gmt":"2025-11-20T11:28:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=34583"},"modified":"2025-11-20T11:28:29","modified_gmt":"2025-11-20T11:28:29","slug":"how-to-fix-a-typewriter-and-your-life","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=34583","title":{"rendered":"How to Fix a Typewriter and Your Life"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-byline svelte-w3rvbf\"> <span class=\"g-last-byline svelte-w3rvbf\">Text by Kurt Streeter<\/span> <span class=\"g-byline-additional svelte-w3rvbf\">Visuals by Ruth Fremson<\/span><\/p>\n<p>  Nov. 19, 2025  <\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\"><strong>Eleven years ago, Paul Lundy<\/strong> was dying a slow, workingman\u2019s death under fluorescent light.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">For three decades, he had worked in facilities management \u2014 an honest trade that ground him down until, in his mid-50s, he had money, an authoritative title and a soul that was being sucked dry. He managed buildings for Seattle-area biotech firms, where people in lab coats made discoveries that saved lives. He kept the infrastructure running. He was good at it, maybe great, but facilities managers are overhead, essential but invisible. Nobody notices until something breaks.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy had reached a ceiling. No college degree meant no room to grow in a world that valued credentials above experience. Retirement at 65 stretched before him like a prison sentence. The three-hour commute was killing him \u2014 a ritual that thousands endure to afford living near Seattle.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cFun was not what you would call it anymore,\u201d allows Lundy, a trim, neatly pleated man with a soft, welcoming face.<\/p>\n<p><h3 class=\"g-heading svelte-rd8s6y\">Listen to this article with reporter commentary<\/h3>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">One Sunday morning in 2014, he opened The Seattle Times and found a feature story about Bob Montgomery, age 92, known to friends, customers and locals simply as Mr. Montgomery. The article read like an obituary for a vanishing trade \u2014 fixing typewriters \u2014 suggesting that when Mr. Montgomery went, seven decades of expertise would vanish into the digital ether.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy read it once, then a second time. He had never given old typewriters much thought, but something stirred in him that he could not quite name. He showed the story to his wife, Lisa.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cI think this might be it,\u201d he told her. The next weekend, he drove to Bremerton, a weary naval town an hour\u2019s ferry ride away and a world apart from gleaming, digitized Seattle.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\"><strong>Finding Mr. Montgomery\u2019s shop<\/strong> required determination. No sign marked the building; no indication that inside, five floors up, a master craftsman was keeping alive skills that predated the computer age. You took an elevator that groaned. When the doors opened, you knew immediately you were in the right place: a 1916 Royal Model 10 typewriter stood guard outside an open door, and the air smelled like oil. Once inside, you encountered a shop stacked and stuffed with typewriters \u2014 Underwoods and Coronas, Royal KMMs and Remington Portable 3s.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">And there, at a workbench, sat Mr. Montgomery.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">He was small, frail, bent by osteoporosis enough that \u201che had a right angle,\u201d Lundy says.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">But his hands moved across the typewriter before him with unconscious grace, removing screws without looking, adjusting linkages by feel alone.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cWelcome to the crazy house,\u201d Mr. Montgomery said, his standard greeting.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy had planned to stay 20 minutes. He stayed four hours. What captured him was not nostalgia. What captured him was watching Mr. Montgomery work, the old man dismantling a machine while carrying on a conversation, barely glancing at the complexity beneath his fingers.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cWELCOME TO THE CRAZY HOUSE.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Mr. Montgomery had grown up in Depression-era Seattle, the son of a typewriter repairman who had a shop in the city\u2019s downtown. When he was not learning the trade, he would sneak through alleyways into grand old theaters to watch rehearsals, developing a love for performance that would shape his life nearly as much as typewriters.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Then came World War II. Drafted at 18, he expected to carry a rifle through Europe. But the Army discovered his skill and put him to work fixing typewriters at Supreme Allied Command. \u201cProbably saved his life,\u201d Lundy says. After the war, his family opened Bremerton Office Machine Company in 1947. For the next 70 years, Mr. Montgomery stayed within a few blocks of downtown Bremerton, always fixing typewriters, even as the world abandoned them.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\"><strong>What Lundy discovered<\/strong> over the following months was that Mr. Montgomery knew how to patiently stretch everything \u2014 even a meal. Lundy began taking him to lunch every Saturday, and their meals became meditations. Mr. Montgomery would order a BLT with avocado and make it last 90 minutes, telling stories between bites and savoring every morsel as only someone who had grown up without much could.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Other than a sister in California, he had no family. He slept in the back of his shop on an orange vinyl hide-a-bed couch. At 92, he existed almost completely outside the system.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy had been a 20-minute lunch guy his entire career \u2014 eat fast, back to work, back to the grind. Now, somehow, he found himself slowing down, learning a different rhythm. Lunches became a practice in patience, a different way of being in the world.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cMr. Montgomery was such a nice guy,\u201d Lundy says, emphasizing \u201csuch.\u201d The old man made him feel seen. And listened to. Like everything mattered.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">After a few months, Lundy noticed typewriters stacking up faster than Mr. Montgomery could repair them. Business had surged after the article. \u201cCan I help?\u201d Lundy asked one day.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Mr. Montgomery said yes. Lundy started coming after his facilities job, heading straight to the shop. Mr. Montgomery set him up a bench with a typewriter and photocopied repair manual pages. He left him to figure things out.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy\u2019s hands, accustomed to managing air-conditioning systems, had to learn a new language \u2014 to feel the difference between correct tension and too loose or too tight. When he thought a repair was perfect, he brought it to Mr. Montgomery, who tested it with quick fingers dancing across the keys and, invariably, pronounced: \u201cThat is not what I would have done.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">He showed Lundy the right way. No anger. No frustration. Just quiet insistence that good enough was not good enough.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Sometimes Mr. Montgomery would partly disassemble a machine and leave it on Lundy\u2019s bench \u2014 a test, a puzzle, a method of teaching as old as apprenticeship itself.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cIt\u2019s like Zen,\u201d Lundy says about those hours at the bench. \u201cThere are times when it is just very relaxing to be standing in front of the machine and slowly cleaning it, tweaking the adjustment so visually things start to really line up.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\"><strong>One Saturday Lundy arrived<\/strong> at the shop to find men with clipboards pointing at Mr. Montgomery\u2019s equipment. They were evicting him, readying everything for the dumpster; 13 months of unpaid rent had finally caught up.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy could not abide the thought of all that knowledge lost, all that skill and history being tossed away. He called his wife. \u201cThey\u2019re kicking him out!\u201d he said. \u201cMy whole opportunity might be lost. I think this might be what I want to do.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cYou\u2019ve done crazier things,\u201d she replied. \u201cDo it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">The building manager arrived next, spelling out the cost: 13 months at $200 per month, equaling $2,600 total. For Mr. Montgomery, who had maybe $200 in the bank, this was insurmountable. For Lundy, with his steady salary, it was doable.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cI will pay his back rent if I buy his business,\u201d Lundy told the manager. \u201cI\u2019ll pay monthly rent going forward.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Deal.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">The eviction crew left. Mr. Montgomery, who had watched the chaos with the remote calm of an elder, looked at Lundy and said just one word: \u201cOK.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy bought the business at the end of 2014. Soon, he quit his job and walked away from its stultifying steadiness, its salary and benefits. His colleagues were sure he had lost his mind. But Lundy knew he was trading security for meaning, predictability for possibility. \u201cI was happy,\u201d he says simply.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">For the next few years, Lundy and Mr. Montgomery worked side by side in that cramped fifth-floor shop. Mr. Montgomery was still the master, but he was slowing, taking longer naps. More and more often, he would look at a typewriter that had come in for repair and turn to Lundy: \u201cYou do this one.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">The teaching continued, deeper now, Mr. Montgomery pulling tools off the pegboard \u2014 tools he had organized decades ago, many he had made himself, his initials etched in the handles. \u201cHe knew everything about every typewriter, just off the top of his head,\u201d Lundy says. \u201cI know maybe 10 percent of what he knew. Maybe.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Eventually Mr. Montgomery would watch his student work and deliver his highest praise: \u201cYou are OK.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">By the time Mr. Montgomery reached his mid-90s, life was catching up with him. His friends had intervened, helping him sign up for the veteran and Social Security benefits he had never claimed and finding him subsidized housing at a nearby retirement home \u2014 his first real home in decades. But he kept coming to the shop regularly, taking the bus in the morning. The bus drivers knew Mr. Montgomery and seemed to have memorized his routine \u2014 if he was running a bit late, they would wait.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Mr. Montgomery fell and broke his hip. His health declined fast, the way it does when the very old finally succumb to gravity. One afternoon, Lundy visited him in his apartment and threw out uneaten food that had accumulated in the refrigerator. Mr. Montgomery watched for a while, then said quietly: \u201cI\u2019m glad you did this.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Both men knew he was talking about Lundy continuing the tradition at the shop.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Mr. Montgomery died in September 2018, at age 96. Full military honors were held at the cemetery. Lundy gave the eulogy, his voice breaking as he tried to convey the sum of a man who had lived through the Depression and World War II, who had become an iconic community fixture and spent 70 years fixing machines the world had forgotten, who had worked until the very end because work was who he was.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">What neither man could have known was that they had been standing at the edge of the typewriter\u2019s unlikely resurrection. The revival began quietly in temples of analog nostalgia \u2014 think Brooklyn coffee shops and Portland boutique hotels. Tom Hanks became an unlikely patron saint, writing a book about typewriters, collecting hundreds of them. Then came 2020. Everyone stuck at home, screens everywhere, Zoom fatigue setting in. People craved something tangible. Typewriter sales exploded.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cThe kids get it,\u201d Lundy says. \u201cThey\u2019re not trying to be nostalgic for something they never experienced. They\u2019re trying to escape what they experience every day.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\"><strong>Now it is a Saturday<\/strong> morning. October 2025. Paul Lundy hunches over an IBM Selectric, a machine nearly 50 years old, probing its guts with the delicate touch he learned from Mr. Montgomery. The machine has taken its share of falls. Oil and dust have conspired over decades to form clogging sludge. Dog hair, too \u2014 there always seems to be dog hair.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">He keeps solvent flowing, working back and forth through the brown muck, treating the dirt not as debris but as the accumulated record of life lived hunched over a keyboard \u2014 the residue of a marriage proposal, a first novel, a military order, a last will and testament.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">His shop is different now. Brighter, airier, on the main floor of a building that was wasting away in downtown Bremerton until Lundy cobbled together enough savings to buy and renovate it, using all those facilities management skills he thought he\u2019d left behind. He had kept the business in that cramped fifth-floor space for six years after Mr. Montgomery\u2019s death. Management was planning apartments, Lundy says, so he wound up here \u2014 in a 1910 building that once housed a local electric utility\u2019s headquarters.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cIT\u2019LL ALWAYS BE HIS.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">From the basement below his wooden floors comes the thump of bass guitar, the crash of drums. Rock bands practice during many of his working hours. The structure shakes with enthusiasm. He smiles, tugs on his workman\u2019s apron, adjusts his black-framed glasses and does not lose attention.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">He clicks a return button. The Selectric whirs. He listens.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cThe problems you see \u2014 and sometimes the problems you hear,\u201d he says, wryly, as he adjusts the operational shaft, \u201care not always the real problem.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Now the stubborn machine is yielding its secrets at last. Lundy has flushed its brown sludge, freed its operational shaft, oiled the precise points where metal meets metal.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Mr. Montgomery\u2019s soul fills this space. The 1916 Royal Model 10 that stood guard at the old shop stands here now. There\u2019s his woolen hat. There\u2019s a photo from Bremerton\u2019s Bob Montgomery Day, which he bristled at because he didn\u2019t like attention. There are his community theater awards \u2014 best director, again and again \u2014 testament to the love of performance that began in those old Seattle theaters. There sit his notes, repair manuals and tools: blue-handled wrenches, metallic probes, soft-bristled brushes. Mr. Montgomery\u2019s bench is where Lundy works.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cIt\u2019ll always be his,\u201d Lundy says of the shop, now called Bremerton Typewriter Company. \u201cI am just borrowing it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Lundy\u2019s wife, Lisa, works at her own bench. She started learning repair work during the pandemic and became proficient, helping with the backlog.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">The phone rings steadily; customers call from as far as Florida, New York and beyond. The novelist who needs an escape from the internet\u2019s magnetic pull; the screenwriter convinced that only keys that fight back can force out good work; the teenagers who have just found a grandmother\u2019s pristine Corona, a grandfather\u2019s portable Hermes.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">It is Lundy who takes on apprentices now. He teaches the way Mr. Montgomery did: patiently letting mistakes happen because mistakes educate best. It\u2019s a steady transfer of knowledge, a careful passing of the seemingly arcane, a customer-is-always-right way of doing business.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">Want to come in and type a poem on a 1920s Underwood? Sure, take a seat, don\u2019t rush.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">You\u2019re over 90? Front of the queue.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">\u201cGotta lay out the red carpet for our elderly customers,\u201d Lundy says. \u201cPeople forget that when you were younger, you did things. You made a difference. Then you get old and society just sees an old guy waiting for the bus, and it\u2019s almost like you don\u2019t exist.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-19nwvmi\">This year, Paul Lundy turned 65. Had he stayed in his old job he would have retired, probably on his birthday. Instead, he is working six days a week and smiling through it: \u201cI cannot imagine stopping.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Text by Kurt Streeter Visuals by Ruth Fremson Nov. 19, 2025 Eleven years ago, Paul Lundy was dying a slow, workingman\u2019s death under fluorescent light. For three decades, he had worked in facilities management \u2014 an honest trade that ground him down until, in his mid-50s, he had money, an authoritative title and a soul<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":34584,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[55],"tags":[2076,337,19632],"class_list":{"0":"post-34583","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-social-issues","8":"tag-fix","9":"tag-life","10":"tag-typewriter"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/34583","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=34583"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/34583\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/34584"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=34583"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=34583"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=34583"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}