Computer History Museum

Lisp history by year

Item Details

Description
This series constitutes the core materials for Stoyan’s study of the history of LISP, comprising what Stoyan himself referred to as a “LISP museum.” It includes a variety of types of documents, including proposals, memoranda, technical reports, progress reports, manuals, standards documents, preprints, source program listings, conference proceedings, selected serials issues, and promotional materials. Some of the items in this series are original publications, e.g., spirit duplicator or mimeograph; many were photocopied by Stoyan. Books originally in this series were moved to series 7. Interspersed within the series are several large categories of materials, including: Progress reports (1957-1972) from several organizations headquartered at MIT, including Research & Educational Activities in Machine Computation by the Cooperating Colleges of New England, Research Lab of Electronics, and Project MAC Artificial Intelligence Group. Memoranda and technical reports (1955-1993) containing a few documents from Dartmouth and IBM Corporation (where McCarthy consulted) and continuing with documents from MIT, recording the development and early applications of LISP. This is followed by documents from System Development Corporation, where LISP 2 was developed, and Stanford University, where McCarthy started an artificial intelligence group in 1962. Later documents are from universities and research laboratories all over the world, as interest in LISP spread. See also series 5, Technical reports. Manuals (1960-1992) include a preliminary draft of the original MIT LISP programmer’s manual, as well as the LISP I and Lisp 1.5 programmer’s manuals. Also included in this series are manuals for all subsequent major implementations of LISP (e.g., MIT Maclisp, Stanford Lisp 1.6, BBN LISP, INTERLISP, IBM LISP, and Common Lisp) as well as many less well-known dialects and implementations. The collection includes multiple versions of the manuals for many implementations. See also series 2, Manuals, manuscripts and subject files. Source program listings (1964-1991) include mostly small to medium-sized programs written in LISP, such as LISP compilers, text editors, and artificial intelligence applications. See also series 2, Manuals, manuscripts, and subject files, and series 3, Source program listings.
Date
01/1955-12/1993
Collection title
Herbert Stoyan collection on LISP programming
Credit
Gift of Herbert Stoyan
Catalogue number
600000391
Lot number
X5687.2010

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102720392
converted_cover_pdf

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102720395
converted_cover_pdf

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102720759
converted_cover_pdf

Review copy. Copyright 1975 by John Allen.

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102720817
converted_cover_pdf

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102720818
converted_cover_pdf

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718946

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718947

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718948

Vol. 6 pp. 41-60.

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718949

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718950

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718951

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718952

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718954

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718955

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718956

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718957

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718958

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718959

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718961

Type
Document
Catalogue number
102718962