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Tony Casillo
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Updated: May 6, 2014
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Tony Casillo
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May 06, 2014 7:14 PM
Tony Casillo
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May 06, 2014 7:12 PM
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Godfrey H. Lasar, A photo of Godfrey H. Lasar
Godfrey H. Lasar, A photo of Godfrey H. Lasar
Tony Casillo
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May 06, 2014 7:12 PM
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Tony Casillo
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May 06, 2014 7:12 PM
Tony Casillo
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May 06, 2014 7:12 PM
Godfrey H. Lasar death certificate
A photo of Godfrey H. Lasar's death certificate.
A photo of Godfrey H. Lasar's death certificate.
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AncientFaces
This account is shared by Community Support (Kathy Pinna & Daniel Pinna & Lizzie Kunde) so we can quickly answer any questions you might have.
Please reach out and message us here if you have any questions, feedback, requests to merge biographies, or just want to say hi!
2020 marks 20 years since the inception of AncientFaces. We are the same team who began this community so long ago. Over the years it feels, at least to us, that our family has expanded to include so many. Thank you!
2020 marks 20 years since the inception of AncientFaces. We are the same team who began this community so long ago. Over the years it feels, at least to us, that our family has expanded to include so many. Thank you!


The Lasar type-writer was invented by Godfrey Henry Lasar, the son of German immigrants to America and an attempt at selling the machine was made by the Lasar Type-Writer Company of St. Louis in the mid 1880's. It is a downstroke, caps only machine of considerable size and substance and was somewhat advanced for its day. Despite protection by at least seventeen patents, the typewriter, and its small upstart company, disappeared quickly and forever from the marketplace. Typewriter historians of the period credit patent infringement lawsuits for its demise.
