Handwriting Thomas Cooper Library
Handwriting Thomas Cooper Library
Instruction
ARCHIVED ONLINE EXHIBIT
Originally exhibited at the Thomas Cooper Library, University of South Carolina
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Archived Online Exhibit ................................................................................................................................. 1
Introduction .................................................................................................................................................. 2
Early Modern Handwriting Manuals ............................................................................................................. 4
The Eighteenth Century ................................................................................................................................ 8
1 The Eighteenth Century.......................................................................................................... 8
The Spencerian and Palmer Methods ......................................................................................................... 11
2 The Spencerian and Palmer Methods ............................................................................... 11
The Early Twentieth Century ...................................................................................................................... 20
3 The Early Twentieth Century............................................................................................... 20
Variants & Unique Examples....................................................................................................................... 28
New Office Skills, Or, Post-Handwriting...................................................................................................... 40
4 New Office Skills, Or, Post-Handwriting .......................................................................... 40
INTRODUCTION
In the Early Modern period, the need for both rudimentary literacy and writing skills
expanded to a larger proportion of the population. The attendant need for instruction in
writing was answered in part by the new technology of printing, which allowed writing
manuals to influence larger numbers of teachers and students alike. With penmanship no
longer confined to the scriptorium and the legal world, the growing sphere of secular,
growing transnational mercantille networks brought about significant changes in how elites
and the educated classes conducted its public and private lives through handwritten
documents.
In America, compulsary public schooling was required by law in some areas of New
England beginning in the 1790s. The attendant need for textbooks and copybooks for
handwriting instruction boomed along with a growing United States population over the
nineteenth century. Competing theories and methodologies for teaching handwriting
emerged.
Related advances and innovations demanded their own subgenres: shorthand, blackboard
writing, Melvil Dewey’s “library hand,” as well as books that addressed new social situations
relating to this expansion in letters: sample books of business letters for skilled tradesmen,
etiquette manuals and courtesy books, and finally the emergent genre of typewriting
manuals at the end of the nineteenth century.
Many of these books come from the William Savage Textbook Collection, which was
maintained by the School of Education for many years as a reference collection for state
educators. The collection, totalling over 4000 volumes of American schoolbooks from the
1780s to the 1980s, was transferred to Rare Books and Special Collections in 2005 and is
fully cataloged and available for research. Additional sources may be found in Rare Books
and Special Collections, and we welcome further interest and questions.
The Complete American Letter-Writer, and Best Companion for the Young Man in Business.
Containing Letters on Trade and Merchandise, Expressly Calculated for the Youth of the
United States. Also, Several Forms of Precedents Used in the Transaction of Business in
America. To Which Are Added, Familiar Letters on Interesting Subjects.
New-York: Richard Scott, 1807.
– A later edition of a book first published in Philadelphia in 1793, the American Letter-
Writer is a compilation of sample letters for every occasion, from the formal to the familiar.
Its expressed purpose is to “supply the young tradesman with a small compendium of useful
knowledge, as to the business of his profession.” The less business-inclined letters are
included to provide instruction and moral guidance as well as aids to various newly-
encountered social situations. This reference book, coupled with some level of instruction in
handwriting, would allow any young clerk or skilled tradesman to successfully negotiate the
growing commercial world of the New Republic. This volume, interestingly, also
includes Essays on Love, Courtship, and Marriage, To Which is Added A Complete Letter-
Writer on Those Subjects, also published in New York in 1807, in a contemporary binding.
THE SPENCERIAN AND PALMER METHODS
2 The Spencerian and Palmer Methods
H. C. (Henry Caleb) Spencer.
Spencerian Key to Practical Penmanship. Prepared for the “Spencerian Authors” by H. C.
Spencer.
New York and Chicago: Ivison, Blakeman, Taylor & Co., 1866.
William Savage Textbook Collection.
– Platt R. Spencer developed his “Spencerian” method while teaching handwriting in the
early nineteenth century. Instead of teaching penmanship as a series of stylized,
memorized letters, Spencer broke down letters into common elements based on natural
forms, which could then be combined to form individual letters. His first published work was
in 1848, and after his death, his family continued in the business, which essentially
dominated penmanship instruction in America after the Civil War. Books such as this 1866
edition were successfully marketed by members of the Spencer family to schools across the
country.
A. N. (Austin Norman) Palmer, 1859-1927.
The Palmer Method of Business Writing: A Series of Self-Teaching in Rapid, Plain,
Unshaded, Coarse-Pen, Muscular Movement Writing For Use in all Schools, Public or
Private, Where an Easy and Legible Handwriting is the Object Sought; Also for the Home
Learner.
Cedar Rapids: A. N. Palmer Co., 1915.
Gift of Elizabeth Newton.
– The Palmer Method was the second major handwriting technique popularized in the late
nineteenth century, fully displacing Spencerian handwriting by the 1890s. Palmer found the
Spencerian method too slow, ornamental, and inefficient, especially in the way it required
lifting the pen off the page. If one tried to write too rapidly using a Spencerian script,
clarity quickly deteriorated. To compensate, Palmer developed a quicker, simplified and
more pragmatic script more attuned to business writing than creating “pretty” letterforms.
Palmer allied his philosophy with the muscular Christianity movement of the late nineteenth
century, and his business empire of correspondence schools, pads and copybooks,
manuals and training materials grew quickly to be the dominant tradition in American
handwriting instruction from the 1890s through the Progressive era.
Frederick M. King, Ed.D.
Palmer Method Cursive Writing: Grade 5. Centennial Edition.
Schaumberg IL: A. N. Palmer Co, 1984.
William Savage Textbook Collection.
– Proof to the longevity and influence of A. N. Palmer’s methods, the company which bears
his name existed into the 1980s. By the mid-twentieth century, the Palmer method lost favor
in the schools. Handwriting instruction moved to first teaching manuscript hand, or block
printing, at an early age, followed by teaching cursive writing once printing has been
mastered. The Palmer company – here in its Centenntial edition – attempted to adapt its
methodology to changing pedagogical needs in creating new copybooks such as this one.
A Reaction to the Palmer Method
Mary Monica Waterhouse Bridges.
A New Handwriting for Teachers.
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1899.
– In this elaborately-produced edition with lithographs and copperplate engravings, Bridges
makes a case for revisiting the great sixteenth and seventeenth century Italian letterforms
and incorporating them into a new hand to be taught in the schools. “It is certainly desirable
that there should be more good models for slow writing, as there is abundant occasion for
its use….It would be a good thing if reproductions of these…were hung in schools, not only
to give to children the history of their own Alphabet, but also to show them how lovely a
thing handwriting can be.”
Marion E. Lewry.
Noble’s Handwriting for Everyday Use.
New York: Noble and Noble, Inc., 1953.
– This manual, from mid-century, shows the changes occurring in handwriting instruction at
this time, as manuscript printing is recommended for Grades 1 and 2, with the transition to
cursive writing taking place in Grade 3.
Walter B. Barbe.
Zaner-Bloser Handwriting. Workbook: Manuscript.
Columbus: Zaner-Bloser, Inc. 1977.
– This 1970s elementary school workbook is for manuscript hand, or block printing, and
notably recognizes the existence of both right- and left-handed students. Zaner-Bloser,
which is still in business, began as the Zanerian College of Penmanship in Columbus, Ohio,
in 1888. Elmer Ward Bloser, who had been an instructor of Spencerian penmanship, came
on as a partner in the 1890s. The college was incorporated into a new corporation, the
Zaner-Bloser Company, in 1895, and had a bestselling writing text in 1904, The Zaner
Method of Arm Movement.
M. T. C. Gould, 1793-1860.
The Art of Short-Hand Writing, Compiled from the Latest European Publications, With
Sundry Improvements, Adapted to the Present State of Literature in the United States.
Philadelphia, 1830.
– There are numerous historical examples of complete symbolic writing systems, shortened
wordforms, the use of ligatures, and other methods for saving time when capturing the
spoken word on paper, or for saving space on the written page. Likewise, language code
systems have long been employed by states and individuals for every use from diplomatic
communications to diary entries. Modern shorthand (tachygraphy, or occasionally called
brachygraphy) dates to several early seventeenth century English texts, with numerous
systems and variants continuing into the present, and stenography is the act of writing
shorthand. This system by Gould is an early nineteenth century system modified for and
marketed (like The Complete American Letter-Writer in Case 2) to American audiences.
“Library Hand”
Melvil Dewey, 1851-1931.
Simplified Library School Rules.
Boston: The Library Bureau, 1904.
– Dewey, besides authoring the library classification system that bears his name, was the
most influential library science theorist, publisher, and educator of the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries. He founded The Library Bureau as a library supply company in
1876. Through its publishing arm, he supplied the textbooks that trained several
generations of American librarians and influenced nearly every aspect of their work, down to
the specialized “library hand” developed for writing legibly on catalog cards. Dewey was
also involved in spelling reform efforts (hence the use on these pages of the words
“disjoind” and “alfabets”) and in later life would spell his surname “Dui.”
Charles Paxton Zaner.
Blackboard Writing.
Columbus: O. Zaner & Bloser Co., 1911.
– For teachers in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, writing on the blackboard was the
most efficient way to communicate quickly to an entire class. Attendant handbooks for
teachers on the theory and practice of writing vertically on the blackboard were published
and are numerous enough to constitute their own subgenre. This example uses
photographs of writing posititions and examples of text on the blackboard to especially good
effect.
Sample Letters For All Occasions
Sarah Annie Frost.
Frost's Original Letter-Writer.
New York: Dick & Fitzgerald, 1867.