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Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Reading Old Documents: The Long S
Posted by Diane
Q
. I noticed that the hornbook pictured on page 12 of the
May 2008
Family Tree Magazine
has a 27-letter alphabet, with a unknown letter between
r
and
s
. What’s the story?
A
. The 18th-century English hornbook shown in our May 2008 History Matters column (here’s the hornbook—
it's from the Library of Congress Rare Book and Special Collections division
) features a character called the long
s
.
The long
s
, which looks like a lower-case
f
, was common in 18th-century England and Colonial New England. It was often used as an
s
at the beginning or in the middle of a word (as in
fentiment
), or as one or both letters of a double
s
(
congrefs
).
The long
s
was not generally used as the final letter of a word—for that, people used the familiar short, or terminal,
s
.
The long
s
fell out of use around 1800 in England and 1820 in the United States.
For more on the long
s
, see
Wikipedia's well-illustrated article
and the book
Researching Your Colonial New England Ancestors
By Patricia Law Hatcher (Ancestry, $16.95).
The book is available for a limited preview in Google; I've added it to
Family Tree Magazine
’s Google Library
for your linking convenience.
genealogy basics
|
printed sources
|
US roots
Wednesday, March 18, 2009 3:16:42 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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