Yup, me too. And we called them guessing sticks or slip sticks too.
But I'm talking early '60's when I started my apprenticeship.
But back in the same era as the Naval gunfire vids (thanks for posting those BTW, fascinating) various things on WWII bombers and fighters (bomb sights, gun sights, etc) were also all mechanical - gyros, cams, gears, springs, etc, etc) As was the famous Top Secret American Norden bomb sight.
And if you go back further - 1920's & '30's, and read Nevil Shute's "Slide Rule" (just one example), all the stress calcs on each structural element of the UK's R100 airship framework (the "caplitalist airship" that didn't crash!) were all done by a team of "calculators" working with circular slide rules and mechanical adding machines ("Computators" I think they were called - they weren't even electric, you had to turn the handle "X" number of times).
And now apparently, my smart phone has more computing power than NASA had for putting men on the moon in 1969.