Thomas Edison, John Jackson, Melvil Dewey, and Early Vertical Writing
When he writes slowly and with care--from fifteen to twenty-five words a minute--Mr. Edison's handwriting is phenomenally clear and beautiful, resembling copperplate printing; not in a flowing, but in a cramped hand, the letters often being separated as in print. When he rises to forty words a minute, the writing is still more cramped and less beautiful, though yet legible; with forty-nine words a minute, his writing is quite illegible.
John Jackson, the most prominent of the promoters of the vertical style in England writes a chapter on the "History of Vertical Writing and its Revival" on page 118 of his book Theory and Practice of Handwriting that “concurrent agitations dated from about the year 1870 to the year 1887 when the two forces combined (each being complementary to the other)” were responsible for the move to upright penmanship in England. This book provides considerable detail about the different people and countries in Europe studying the vertical style as a remedy to poor eyesight and bad posture among students. He also makes the argument in the beginning of this chapter on page 111 that "The History of Vertical Writing is the History of all Writing, as, up to about the middle of the 16th century such a thing as Sloping Writing was unknown." This idea we will have to set aside for a separate discussion.
As for the origins of library hand, one might conjecture that this debate over writing styles may have been known by these widely read librarians. With voracious reading habits, staff to help, and access to a plentitude of material, the growing complaints of sloping writing and the rise of vertical seems plausible.
Messrs. Sampson, Low, Marston & Co. viewed the matter favorably from the first: the agreement was drawn out and signed, the books put in hand, and the first series of headline copy-books in upright penmanship ever produced appeared in the month of November, 1886.
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.
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.
This page references:
- Library hand, 1887
- Platt Rogers Spencer, 1856: "Many writers write like me"
- Historical Society of Pennsylvania, library catalog card, circa 1909
- Library hand catalog card sample, 1898
- Houghton Library, Harvard University. Catalog card, Boston Theatre, disjoined hand
- Example of Thomas Edison's writing while working as a Morse telegrapher in 1868
- Joind hand, sentences; alternativ forms
- Columbia University, Catalog card Lee
- Redwood Library and Athenaeum, Newport, Rhode Island.
- Library handwriting, disjoined hand, 1887
- Library handwriting, disjoind hand, 1898
- Comparison of library handwriting 1887 - 1916, Melvil Dewey and the NY State Library School