Rider University has received a three-year, $95,300
grant from The New York Community Trust - John Robert Gregg Fund
to continue the preservation work and to develop Web-based access
to the Louis A. Leslie Collection of shorthand materials.
Bequeathed to Rider in 1983 by the late Louis A.
Leslie, one of the world's foremost shorthand authorities, this
notable collection is housed in Franklin F. Moore Library on the
Lawrenceville campus. Dr. Leslie had spent more than 50 years
collecting shorthand materials from around the world. The collection
contains every shorthand system ever invented and hundreds of
systems that were unsuccessful but influenced by later authors.
This project builds on earlier work funded by the
John Robert Gregg Foundation ($24,000 in 1985 and $31,000 in 1998)
that has facilitated cataloging and organization of materials,
improving the housing environment, as well as conservation and
preservation work. The goal is to create an image-based Web site
that will be broadly available and facilitate scholarly research.
"We are very excited to soon be able to extend intellectual
access to the many rare and often unique items contained in this
fantastic collection of shorthand materials," said F. William
Chickering, dean of university libraries at Rider. "We appreciate
the generosity that the John Robert Gregg Fund has extended to
us over the years. It has allowed us to carefully preserve these
historical materials."
The Leslie collection includes shorthand versions
of the Bible, a 1743 edition of The Book of Common Prayer in Weston's
method of shorthand, and books inscribed in shorthand by such
noted authors as Sir Isaac Pitman and John Robert Gregg. There
are also complete files of shorthand periodicals and shorthand
books in many languages. All European languages are represented.
There are textbooks in Hebrew, Chinese and Japanese, as well as
less common languages such as Tagalog, Thai and Erse.
The Collection also contains letters from Civil
War soldiers written in shorthand to magazine editors and to their
wives or sweethearts. In addition, the Collection reveals how
many authors handled copyright problems in the 18th century. They
printed statements at the beginning of their books that the book
is not genuine unless signed by the author and, at times, prohibited
resale of the book.
The earliest book in shorthand from the Leslie Collection
is a manuscript entitled Semigraphy by Samuel Palmer dated 1669.
Another interesting book for inclusion on the Web site is Arts
Advancement, or, The Most Exact, Lineal, Swift, Short, and Easy
Method of Short-Hand-Writing Hitherto Extent by William Mason,
published in London in 1682. The Collection's copy was a Christmas
gift to "Jack" (John Robert Gregg) from Faith Baldwin, the novelist,
in 1938 to mark the 50th anniversary of the publication of Gregg
Shorthand in 1888.