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László Bíró

Historical Figure

László Bíró

b. 1899

Hungarian-Argentine inventor (1899–1985)

Industrial

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Biography

László József Bíró, Hispanicized as Ladislao José Biro, was an Argentine, Hungary-born Jewish inventor who patented the first commercially successful modern ballpoint pen. The first ballpoint pen had been invented roughly 50 years earlier by John J. Loud, but it was not a commercial success.

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Timeline

The story of László Bíró, told in moments.

1938 Event

Files a patent for the ballpoint pen. He'd noticed that newspaper ink dried quickly without smudging. The trick was getting thick ink to flow. His brother formulated the ink. Laszlo designed a tiny rotating ball at the tip. The fountain pen industry doesn't notice yet.

1943 Life

Flees to Argentina to escape the Nazis. Sets up a factory in Buenos Aires. The RAF orders 30,000 of his pens because they work at high altitude where fountain pens leak. He sells the patent rights cheaply. Others make the fortunes.

1985 Death

Dies in Buenos Aires at 86. In Argentina, Inventors' Day is celebrated on his birthday. In most of the world, people call ballpoint pens "biros." He sold the key patents for almost nothing. Marcel Bich bought one and built an empire called Bic.

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