Background
Austin Palmer was born on December 22, 1857, in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States.
(This vintage text contains a comprehensive guide to the '...)
This vintage text contains a comprehensive guide to the 'Palmer' method of business writing, being a series of self-teaching lessons in rapid, plain, unshaded, coarse-pen writing. 'The Palmer Method' was developed by Austin Palmer in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It was primarily designed to be a simplified version of the 'Spencerian Method', the major standardized system of handwriting since the mid-nineteenth century, and quickly became the most popular handwriting system in America.
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Austin Palmer was born on December 22, 1857, in St. Lawrence County, New York, United States.
In New England, young Austin Palmer entered public school and received his only instruction in writing from the copybooks that were to be his most frequent object of attack in later years.
After completing the public school course, his mother advised him to enter the business college of famed penman George Gaskell. It was here that the young student first became aware that writing skills could reach such a degree of perfection, for Gaskell's office walls were lined with all forms of ornamental specimens. As so many had done before him, Austin Palmer fell under the spell of the bounding stags, graceful birds, and other involved flourishes that were the pride of the master penman.
Palmer's formal education ended with a course at the Literary Institute in New Hampton, New Hampshire, after which he set out to organize classes in penmanship. He gradually worked his way west, teaching in Rockville, Indiana, and St. Joseph, Missouri, where he taught in a business college.
Austin Palmer found work as a penman in Cedar Rapids, hand-copying business letters and forms in the days before typewriters were common. He began to experiment with the strictly Spencerian script he had been taught, and soon developed a less ornate, more rapid, and more relaxed style of writing better suited to the needs of the business.
In the early 1880s, Austin Palmer joined forces with S.H. Goodyear to open the Cedar Rapids Business College, where he began to teach his own method of "muscular writing," so-called because it emphasized whole-arm movements rather than the finger straining movements of previous penmanship styles.
By 1884 Austin Palmer had launched the magazine Western Penman to further spread the news about his handwriting method. Still, by the turn of the century, the effect of Palmer’s method on the American public school system was mostly regional—although it had been widely adopted by parochial schools. That was to change in 1904 when Austin Palmer gave a penmanship exhibit in St. Louis. In attendance were New York City school officials who asked him to come to New York to teach the system to inner-city school students. His results were so impressive that the New York schools began to use his system the very next year. Austin Palmer soon opened a New York office and moved there in 1907 to oversee the widespread adoption of his methods, which quickly spread throughout the rest of the United States. He maintained his ties to Cedar Rapids, however, keeping an apartment ready for his frequent visits. He remained involved with his business college there and with its sister schools in St. Joseph, Missouri, and Creston, Iowa. Austin Palmer was relatively progressive in his educational approach, believing that students should be taught at their own pace and that they should learn a wide variety of skills rather than the narrow focus taught at other business colleges. As a result, his schools were popular, and their graduates had little trouble finding jobs. Palmer’s "Normal Commercial" courses in penmanship and transcription, which were also available by correspondence and as summer courses for already employed teachers, remained a focus of his attention throughout his life. His thousands of students helped spread his teaching methods. The college remained open until 1973.
Palmer’s entrepreneurship skills are evident in the number of products he produced to supplement the teaching of his handwriting method. His A. N. Palmer Company - based in Cedar Rapids until 1955, when it moved to Chicago - manufactured and sold official Palmer pens and paper in addition to its more than 20 textbooks, including Business and High School Edition of the Palmer Method of Business Writing, Standards for the Evaluation of Efficiency in the Palmer Method of Handwriting, and Palmer's Guide to Muscular Movement Writing, all of which went through numerous editions before the company quit publishing handwriting manuals in 1988. At its peak, Palmer’s publishing company had plants in New York, Chicago, Portland, Boston, Philadelphia, and Atlanta, in addition to Cedar Rapids.
(This vintage text contains a comprehensive guide to the '...)
Austin Palmer was married to Sadie Whiting Palmer.