And more...
The Lufkin engineer's tape, to the right, is another with fractional measures on one edge (32nds for the first foot, 16ths after) and 10ths and 100ths of a foot on the other. Presumably for civil engineers.

The K&E "LST [level-square-tape]" is an odd duck. K&E, or Keuffel and Esser, was a respected maker of drafting and surveying equipment (including slide rules) in New Jersey and New York. This tape seems to have been a rather desperate attempt to be hip and relevant, probably in the 1960s or 70s. It's a ten foot tape, nothing fancy there. Four little nubbins on the case, two on the bottom and two on the vertical side, test to a pretty accurate square; but there are limited uses for testing inside square on a very short baseline. The nubbins, though, allow the level bubble on top of the case to test both level and plumb, but, again, on a very short baseline.
