Spencerian Cursive. Can you read it??

fullsizerender
The Charlotte Mason School my child attends teaches this form of cursive. Which does my heart good. Cursive has been taken out of so many schools, it’s shameful.  The outcome from that is many children and adults can no longer read cursive. My child’s little book came home today for us to see his progress so far, so we did some research on this type of cursive. This is what we found. What is interesting to me is my Grandma won awards for her perfect Palmer. Her handwriting was indeed beautiful.

Spencerian Script is a script style that was used in the United States from approximately 1850 to 1925 and was considered the American de facto standard writing style for business correspondence prior to the widespread adoption of the typewriter.

Platt Rogers Spencer, whose name the style bears, used various existing scripts as inspiration to develop a unique oval-based penmanship style that could be written very quickly and legibly to aid in matters of business correspondence as well as elegant personal letter-writing.

Spencerian Script was developed in 1840, and began soon after to be taught in the school Spencer established specifically for that purpose. He quickly turned out graduates who left his school to start replicas of it abroad, and Spencerian Script thus began to reach the common schools. Spencer never saw the great success that his penmanship style enjoyed because he died in 1864, but his sons took upon themselves the mission of bringing their late father’s dream to fruition.

This they did by distributing Spencer’s previously unpublished book, Spencerian Key to Practical Penmanship, in 1866. Spencerian Script became the standard across the United States and remained so until the 1920s when the spreading popularity of the typewriter rendered its use as a prime method of business communication obsolete.

It was gradually replaced in primary schools with the simpler Palmer Method developed by Austin Norman Palmer.

The text in Ford Motor Company’s logo is written in this style, as is the Coca-Cola logo.

Related Articles