"Read, and Be
Wise"
Ivory Hornbook,
eighteenth century, English.
Gift of Leonard Kebler, 1959
Rare Book & Special
Collections Division (102A)
Wood Hornbook,
eighteenth century, possibly American
Rare Book & Special
Collections Division (102.3)
Uncle's Present, a New Battledoor.
Page 2
Philadelphia: J[acob] Johnson [ca. 1810]
Rare Book & Special
Collections Division (103b.2)
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A constant companion to beginning readers in Colonial America,
the hornbook was a popular teaching aid in England during the
sixteenth
through the eighteenth century. Typically, hornbooks were composed
of a printed alphabet sheet tacked or pasted to a wooden bat-shaped
board and covered with a thin sheet of translucent horn, but there
are specimens in ivory, silver, leather and even gingerbread.
Printed
sheets usually included both lower case and capital alphabets,
vowels, and numerals, accompanied by a cross ornament, the Benediction,
and Lord's Prayer. Often attached by string to the owner's belt,
the hornbook was readily available to serve as a bat during play.
However there are unusual specimens like this luxurious example
(pictured below) on a silver sheet incised with the alphabet, complete
with all twenty-six letters and two dipthongs and ten numerals,
and
framed
in ivory and silver.
By the late eighteenth century, the battledore, a secondary term
for hornbook, reproduced the alphabet on a stiff paper card, folded
wallet style, with the flap on the left. Letters were often paired
with pictorial mnemonics. Although printed in Philadelphia, this
Johnson battledore is illustrated with familiar street cries of
London. Printed twelve to sixteen to a sheet, battledores were sold
by chapbook vendors for a penny each.
Ivory hornbook,
eighteenth century,
possibly American
Rare Book & Special Collections
Division
Gift of Brian and Darlene Heidtke (102A.1)
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