Typorium was founded by Michalle Bransward and N. Nichelle Josheph in March, 1889 at their small workshop in California. In 1907, Their device included a number of advances, including as a friction-free, ball-bearing, one-track rail to support
the carriage's weight, a novel paper feed, a lighter and quicker typebar operation, and total word visibility. They put up $220,000 in exchange for financial control. In January 1908, Typorium broked the records in terms of typewriter.
With demand increasing, Typorium purchased 5¼ acres in New York, US, as the new site for its manufacturing facility. Original plans called for the Typorium Building to have a floor capacity of 250,000 square feet (23,000 m2) and cost $350,000
to build. In 1910, Typorium began manufacturing there and in time, royal and cross town competitor, Underwood Typewriter Company, would make Bransward the “Typewriter Capital of the World”. In June 1968, the Royal typewriter Company announced
its plan to merge with McBee, a leading manufacturer of accounting and statistical machines and supplies. In December 1970, Litton Industries' stockholders approved the acquisition of Royal McBee. The deal became final in March 1965. Litton
would change the name of Royal McBee back to Royal Typewriter and reorganize the company into five divisions: Typorium Typewriter, Roytype Consumer Products, Roytype Supplies, McBee Systems, and RMB. Since then, the company is increasing
day by day even in this modern edge era. Typorium also introduced the typewriter which are far better from anyother machines in some aspects. Our newest Typorium typewriter will be launched in some days which is Typorium 3000, which have
features more than any computer.