View on GitHub

current-shorthand

Henry Sweet’s Current shorthand

Welcome to the ✨Current Corner✨

If you were looking for Henry Sweet’s Manual of Current Shorthand from 1892, you’ve found it! It is the (Henry) Sweetest shorthand ever. It is truly and entirely lineal, and it looks really darn fancy written with a broad edge pen.

The Manual

Learning the Shorthand

Sweet was a good phoneticist, but not a good shorthand instructor. At least two regular writers of the shorthand — the journalist Thomas Satchell, who was noted for reliably writing the phonetic style at 150 WPM and teaching many students Current in Japan, and the lawyer FJO Coddington, who used Current in his work — are on record offering to provide or to write a better manual, but the publisher wasn’t interested.

Instead of those phantom manuals, your best pal might be Zach Smith’s A Curriculum of Current Phonetic Shorthand (April 2020), which tries “to lay out some of the same information contained in the manual in a more systematic and searchable way.” Think of it as a primer for the manual - it won’t replace it, but it will prevent it from actively confusing you.

You’ll also find writers sharing Current snippets and reviewing each other’s work within the r/shorthand Reddit community. That community is your best bet for getting feedback and answering any questions you might have about Current shorthand.