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Old 10-07-2010, 01:52 PM
HistoricNewspapers HistoricNewspapers is offline
Brian
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Join Date: Jul 2009
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Those letters are an "s". It was a style thing. It was the practice when using hand written letters, to make an elegant elongated 'S', so to sort of carry that practice into print, they used a character to sort of 'match' that.

If you look closely at what looks like a lower case 'f', it really isn't an 'f'. The horizontal slash does not go through the stem on both sides...only on the left side. Compare that with the real letter f and you see that is normal.

It started fading out of practice in the late 1700's, and was still in strong use during the Rev War
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