The Varieties and Complexities of American Handwriting and Penmanship: Library Hand

Thomas Edison, John Jackson, Melvil Dewey, and Early Vertical Writing

Born in 1847, Thomas Edison grew up at a time when writing was continuing to evolve and to change, and perhaps, therefore,  it should not be surprising that as an inventor himself, he developed his own writing style. 

In these years of his childhood, many writing styles were being borrowed from earlier times or were introduced with variations; sometimes authors or penmen were borrowing or stealing outright the work of each other. Nonetheless, many dozens of different authors and publishers were promoting their work. 

Penmen like Platt Rogers Spencer had taken hold of the imagination and spirit of many young people seeking to impress others with their careful and practiced writing. Here, Spencer celebrates his success in introducing his own style in 1856, though one might note that it is only one of many styles that he used and promoted.


It is interesting to note that Edison's boyhood penmanship does not represent the norm of a forward slanted joined script promoted by Spencer and others. Instead, Edison, at the age of 15, had a somewhat unimpressive mixed style of a backhanded cursive with some lettering. Save for the forward slant of the first line, the rest of the missive is mostly backhand.

As a growing man with an evolving writing style of his own, Edison wrote more neatly and consistently with a script much more of a round hand, vertical style, as seen here in 1866.

Employed as a telegraph clerk trying to write faster and more legibly. He kept experimenting: writing smaller, removing the excessive flourishes, and timed himself writing until his speed could no longer be increased. This style he developed was perpetuated among and imitated by other telegraph clerks.


While Edison's style remains largely unacknowledged in books on the history of penmanship, it is a vertical style unlike the forward slanted style of the time. However, it is fair to say that he neither authored a book on penmanship nor taught it in any institutions, and so he cannot be recognized as among those who influenced the nation's youth nor the broader public. 

As an inventor, Edison did create the Edison Electric Pen in 1875.  It required the user to hold the pen itself perpendicular to the paper, in an  entirely vertical fashion because the mechanics of the device required it. But that was not a vertical writing style. Nor was the electric pen a pen, as it was used as a tool to perforate tissue, and these in turn were used as stencils through which ink was pressed onto paper to make a print. This was but one of the technologies being tried by Melvil Dewey to reduce costs and speed the processes in the libraries.

As for Edison's vertical writing manuscript style and its influences beyond the offices of telegraph clerks, one can examine Edison's influence on library hand, or at the least, on the discussions of it. Among others from the American Library Association, Melvil Dewey attended The Lake George Conference, and on September 9, 1885, the men discussed both the speed and utility of the typewriter for its use, among other things, for cataloging, and then the librarians turned their attention to library handwriting and Edison. In conversation, Mr. Nelson mentions an article in which Edison describes his own writing as being "suitable to cards, by reason of its clearness, and the speed claimed for it." Dewey added that he was himself "conducting a series of experiments to find out what is really the most legible in catalogue drawers for the average reader in the average circumstances." 

Dewey read widely, and it was probable that he also knew of the move towards a vertical script in England being promoted by John Jackson or had read about it in advertisements in the US. No later than March 1887, in Library Notes, vol. 1., no. 4  Dewey began to promote "library handwriting" or "library hand" as it was also called, a vertical style, though he did indicate that it should have a slight backwards slant. Like Edison, he was interested in speed, efficiency, and legibility. One can think of the vertical style as the handwritten equivalent to the typewriter, which was rapidly evolving as a fast and efficient office machine that created its own vertical print. 

In both the original and reprinted version of the March 1887 article, Dewey explains his reasoning on what is necessary for "library alphabets and figures."

It remains to discuss main question, the forms of letters which will give the greatest legibility. Of some letters the copy-books give as many as 20 different forms from which people select the style that suits their taste, as ladies choose ribbons for their bonnets.

The rubric that all catalogers should write a uniform standard library hand, makes it necessary at once to throw out 19 of these 20 forms. At once all see that where the highest legibility is more important than all else together, we must prohibit peremptorily everything in the nature of ornament or flourish. The simpler and fewer the lines the better, as long as the distinctness of the letter is not impaired.


Looking back for a moment to Edison's own writing, one will see that a distinct difference between it and Dewey's library hand is that Edison employs what some might have considered lettering, in that each of the letters is distinct and not joined. It varies from "script" or "cursive" and is what some today call "printing." In this, too, Edison was far ahead of his time. In a paragraph from 1887, Dewey does indicate that disjoined hand is preferred.

The expanded and revised reprinted article from 1887 includes Dewey's first model of disjoined hand.



Dewey's version of disjoined hand seems much more like a typeface to be used by a typewriter or a printer than a style to be written by hand. And it is interesting that his later versions seem to reintroduce a more flowing style, like that of Edison, or other vertical writing that Jackson or others were promoting.

These other iterations of vertical style in the 1880s and 1890s had different motivations and a different group in mind--children in school. These new writing methods were widely promoted with great vigor and backed by what were seen as scientific studies. Writing teachers in Europe first adopted vertical writing, and it came to be popularized by John Jackson in England in the 1880s. While it is hard to find the exact date that Jackson's vertical style came to be known by those in the United States, advertisements were printed not later than 1887. Here, one can see an advertisement of it in The Educational Times from London.

The history of vertical writing for children and schools had its own, separate arc, quite apart from Edison's or Dewey's own efforts. The vertical writing that children used came first from the Europeans, then to John Jackson in England, then to Canada with Newlands and Row as early adopters, to Edwin Orlando Vaile in Chicago, who claims to be the first in the US to introduce a series of books employing this style, and then Harison in 1893 in New York City. All these men and their publishers were at the forefront of the movement in the US; and many others followed in the years 1894 - 1904.

The introduction of vertical penmanship also was layered upon the previous efforts of teachers to instruct students in writing. The evidence surrounding the use of "printing," or manuscript print in the classroom is somewhat elusive. The exact relationship between the use of script and print in the classroom seems to vary, as it is not clear whether it was more likely for teachers to insist on script first, and then printing; or, printing, and then script. In The New Education, vol. 2, no. 5, September 1894, on page 100, Ellen E. Kenyon describes in her article "Primary Language Work" teaching script in the first month, and then print in the third month.

But to return to Dewey, and his own journey, one can look to the 1898 edition of Simplified Library school rules; card catalog, accession, book numbers, shelf list, capitals, punctuation, abbreviations, library handwriting, and see there are other new letterforms and examples for librarians of both a joined hand and a disjoined hand, or, as he spelled it with simplified spelling, "joind hand" and "disjoind hand." Dewey further divides writing into  the regular and "alternativ" forms. Here, we see joind hand sentences with different letterforms.

Dewey also provides a new set of letterforms for disjoind hand.




 
In the 1898 edition, Dewey also provides an example of what a card written in library hand should look like.



Apart from Dewey's work with library hand, the larger, national trend of using vertical penmanship reversed itself after roughly 1904, though some states like Utah were using  it as late as 1914. In general, though most school systems and people abandoned the vertical style and returned to a forward slanted script--either by employing the older Spencerian script or a newer Spencerian "practical penmanship," one of the many of the assorted "practical styles," the Palmer method, or another.

It is likely that neither Edison, Jackson, nor Dewey would have probably approved of the evolution of their vertical script ideals in the years after their innovations. For many writers, vertical script evolves into an awkward and difficult to read backhand style. One of the greatest penmen ever to explore with devilish humor the limits of legibility of backhand was Francis B. Courtney.

Below is a library card written in approximately 1909. This particular script is less legible since it is somewhat ornate; it is also not in Dewey's prescribed style. Is this a librarian who did not follow the rules? A person who learned vertical penmanship in the era from 1894 - 1904, and whose writing had simply deteriorated like that of others? While not overly poor, it is not what any of these earlier promoters of vertical writing had identified as ideal.




Through these examples, the evolution of writing appears somewhat regressive or circuitous. One must contemplate how a forward slanted script's angle could be nullified by the vertical and then reversed into a backhand. And how is it that such efforts for efficiency and legibility and reform could have brought about these unintended results? Is the librarian writing this script the problem, or is library hand itself poorly designed and therefore prone to become harder to write as one gets older?

Here, one can see the final comparisons of library handwriting in the years 1887 - 1916. I cannot claim that this comparison is complete, because my research continues in this area, but here are the examples printed in books that I have located.



To anyone who might reference the use of library hand, you could consider asking them, "To what year and to what style, joined or disjoined hand, do you refer?"

All of this effort to find a rapid form of writing that was easy to read and that served both businesses and schools saw Palmer and even what was branded as Spencerian "practical writing" emerge from the end of the 1800s and into the early 1900s. In these decades, many different penman and their publishers printed copybooks and manuals with new writing styles.

There is also a movement that emerges, first in England and then the United States, to replace almost entirely the use of script in favor of a print style, especially in the younger grades of schools. This historical shift is addressed by Frank N. Freeman in "An Evaluation of Manuscript Writing" which appears in The Educator in 1936. 

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