Richard Russell, sermon notebook cover (American Antiquarian Society)

SNOG-RussellSr-1notebookcover

Both the size and the binding of Richard Russell’s sermon notebook are unusual for 17th-century New England. The book is significantly larger than most extant sermon notebook, and it is bound in limp vellum.

You can still see the remnant of a vellum tie that was used to keep the book closed. Ties and clasps on early books protected NOT the written text from prying eyes but rather the material of the book itself. Keeping the tightly closed protected the leaves inside from vermin that would have found the organic material in the paper delicious. The leaves of a tightly closed book were less like to expand and contract with changes in heat and humidity, and so the spine of the book was protected as well.

Sermon notebooks often survive because they are passed down in families. A later owner inscribed Russell’s notebook in 1774 “Thomas Abbot / Ejus Liber” (Latin for “Thomas Abbot His Book,” an early possessive form that preceded the modern form “Thomas Abbot’s book”).

Courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society.

Richard and Daniel Russell, sermon notebook comparison (American Antiquarian Society)

SNOG-RussellJrSr-notebookcompare

These two sermon notebooks of Richard Russell (father) and Daniel Russell (son) are both at the American Antiquarian Society and provide an excellent opportunity for side by side comparison. Looking at the range of physical formats and recording styles used can greatly enhance our understanding of the many ways people kept notes in the early modern period. The rest of the photos in this gallery are dedicated to showing some closer details of the respective preferences of father and son.

Image courtesy of the American Antiquarian Society.

Artifact Day!

Late last week this arrived in the afternoon mail:

HappyArtifactDay

It’s a wonderful feeling to finally hold the Thing Itself in your hand, especially when it is such a pretty little thing. (Though I cannot take credit. The cover photo was a lucky accident with a cheap digital camera in the reading room of the American Antiquarian Society. John Hubbard, a designer whose hand I would like to shake, transformed those pixels into this lovely piece of cover art.)

This, finally, was “Artifact Day.”

The arrival of Artifact Day also reminded me that I needed to hurry up and get more material finalized on this new site of mine. Most pressingly, I was reminded that I needed to get my Sermon Notebooks Online components posted, at least in some kind of Beta format. I’ve long realized that one cannot publish a book emphasizing the importance of reading sermon notebooks in order to understand sermon literature unless one is also willing to try making these quirky and rather inaccessible artifacts more accessible. If you are interested, I hope you will poke around in the Sermon Notebooks Online pages as they develop (and I hope they will be continually in a state of development and expansion). I especially hope you will let me know if you have questions, suggestions, or requests for the site.

Happy Artifact Day, everyone!