The man who invented the
cash machine
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"They're clever
scoundrels," fumes John Shepherd-Barron at his remote farmhouse
in northern Scotland. He is referring to the seals which are
raiding his salmon farm and stealing fish.
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John Shepherd-Barron's cash machine first appeared
in 1967
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"I invented a device to scare them off by playing the sound
of killer whales, but it's ended up only attracting them more."
But failure with this device is in contrast to the success of
his first and greatest invention: the cash machine.
The world's first ATM was installed in a branch of Barclays
in Enfield, north London, 40 years ago this week.
Reg Varney, from the television series On the Buses, was the
first to withdraw cash.
Inspiration had struck Mr. Shepherd-Barron, now 82, while he
was in the bath.
"It struck me there must be a way I could get my own money,
anywhere in the world or the UK. I hit upon the idea of a
chocolate bar dispenser, but replacing chocolate with cash."
Barclays was convinced immediately. Over a pink gin, the then
chief executive signed a hurried contract with Mr.
Shepherd-Barron, who at the time worked for the printing firm De
La Rue.
Teething troubles
Plastic cards had not been invented, so
Mr. Shepherd-Barron's
machine used cheques that were impregnated with carbon 14, a
mildly radioactive substance.
The machine detected it, then matched the cheque against a
Pin number.
Reg Varney was the first to use an ATM
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However, Mr. Shepherd-Barron denies there were any health
concerns: "I later worked out you would have to eat 136,000 such
cheques for it to have any effect on you."
The machine paid out a maximum of £10 a time.
"But that was regarded then as quite enough for a wild
weekend," he says.
To start with, not everything went smoothly. The first
machines were vandalised, and one that was installed in Zurich
in Switzerland began to malfunction mysteriously.
It was later discovered that the wires from two intersecting
tramlines nearby were sparking and interfering with the
mechanism.
Mr. Shepherd-Barron came up with the idea when he realised
that he could remember his six-figure army number. But he
decided to check that with his wife, Caroline.
"Over the kitchen table, she said she could only remember
four figures, so because of her, four figures became the world
standard," he laughs.
End of cash?
Customers using the cash machine at Barclays in Enfield High
Street are mostly unaware of its historical significance.
The plaque at the site of the first ATM goes
unnoticed by many
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Mr. Shepherd-Barron says he and his wife realised the
importance of his invention only when they visited Chiang Mai in
northern Thailand.
They watched a farmer arriving on a bullock cart, who removed
his wide-brimmed hat to use the cash machine.
"It was the first evidence to me that we'd changed the
world," he says.
"Money costs money to transport. I am therefore predicting
the demise of cash within three to five years."
He believes fervently that we will soon be swiping our mobile
phones at till points, even for small transactions.
At 82, Mr. Shepherd-Barron is very much alive to new ideas and
inventions - even though his device that plays killer whale
noises still needs a little bit of tinkering.