Perhaps you are looking for BackButtonForBrowsingHyperText?
You would think that Hypertext would have fairly recent origin, like say the 60s or 70s. But think again. Hypertext is thought by some to have originated in 1945.
From VannevarBush's 1945 essay "AsWeMayThink":
Presumably man's spirit should be elevated if he can better review his shady past and analyze more completely and objectively his present problems. He has built a civilization so complex that he needs to mechanize his records more fully if he is to push his experiment to its logical conclusion and not merely become bogged down part way there by overtaxing his limited memory. His excursions may be more enjoyable if he can reacquire the privilege of forgetting the manifold things he does not need to have immediately at hand, with some assurance that he can find them again if they prove important.
Vannevar Bush introduces a concept for handling the rapidly developing information developed during the 2nd World War in the period following it. His description of the "memex" is amazingly similar to a modern microcomputer and the process he describes for navigation is the forerunner of the modern "browser" (see MemexVision).
See Multimedia and Hypertext: The Internet and Beyond ISBN: 0-12-518408-5 (paperback).
See also: Nyce, J. and Kahn, P., From Memex To Hypertext, Academic Press, 1991, ISBN: 0125232705
1934 PaulOtlet publishes "Traité de documentation", proposing, among other innovations, annotated links between documents
http://boxesandarrows.com/forgotten-forefather-paul-otlet/
1945 Vannevar Bush proposes Memex (see AsWeMayThink)
1965 Ted Nelson introduces Xanadu and the word "hypertext"(reference?)
1966
1967 The Hypertext Editing System and FRESS, Brown University, Andy van Dam
1968 Doug Engelbart demo of NLS system at FJCC
1969 Edward Packard writes "Sugarcane Island" the first known "Choose Your Own Adventure" Book.
http://www.netaxs.com/~katz/game/advyou.htm
1970
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1975 ZOG (now KMS): CMU
1976
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1979 "Choose Your Own Adventure" Books become popular with children in US.
1980
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1983
1984 Filevision Macintosh application from Telos
1984 Michael Lebowitz "Creating Characters in a Story-Telling Universe"
Creation of a story telling program ColumbiaUniversity
http://mh.cla.umn.edu//ebibss2.html
1985 Symbolics Document Examiner, Janet Walker
1985 Intermedia, Brown University, Norman Meyrowitz
1985 NoteCards, Xerox
1986 OWL introduces Guide, first widely available hypertext
1986 Stephen T. Kerr. "Instructional Text: The Transition from Page to Screen." VisibleLanguage introduced.
http://mh.cla.umn.edu//ebibsw1.html
1987 Apple introduces HyperCard, Bill Atkinson
1987 Hypertext'87 first major conference on hypertext
1988 Eric Drexler and Ted Nelson develop the concept of 'ents'; AutoDesk funds a new attempt to implement Xanadu
1989
1990
1991 World Wide Web at CERN becomes first global hypertext, TimBernersLee
1992 New York Times Book Review cover story on hypertext fiction
1993 Mosaic from National Center for Supercomputing Applications; AutoDesk withdraws from the XanaduProject
1993 Hypermedia encyclopedias sales cause the diminishing influence of the printed ones
1994 WikiWiki - An online hypertext authoring system utilizing WikiWords as HyperLinks,
easily editable by all users introduced by WardCunningham
1995 Bibliography of Early Electronic Texts some of which employing hypertext
http://mh.cla.umn.edu//ebib.html
1996
1997
1998
1999 Code from two iterations of the XanaduProject is released OpenSource under the names 'Udanax Green' and 'Udanax Gold'
2000
2001 January - WikiPedia - An online hypertext collaborative encyclopedia formed
2002
provide info in this form:
yyyy month - Historical tidbit.
http link if one exists
Is the history of hypertext complete? Has the ubiquity of the World Wide Web, HTML, & HTTP made hypertext research a dead field?
CategoryInternet CategoryWebDesign CategoryHypercard