William Isaac Blanchard (died 1796) was an English stenographer.
Biography
editBlanchard was the grandson of a French refugee, who resided in England. He became a professional shorthand writer, and practised his art in Westminster Hall from 1767 till his death in 1796.[1] His offices were at 4 Dean Street, Fetter Lane, and 10 Clifford's Inn.
Works
editBlanchard was the inventor of two separate and distinct systems of stenography, the first of which he published under the title of A Complete System of Shorthand.[2] This was followed by the explanation of a more elaborate system in The Complete Instructor of Shorthand.[3] The method of stenography described in the second work was hardly practised, if praised in the Historical Account of Shorthand, under the name of James Henry Lewis. Several trials taken in shorthand by Blanchard were published between 1775 and 1791, including the trials of Admiral Keppel and John Horne Tooke.
References
edit- ^ Stephen, Leslie (1886). Dictionary of National Biography. Macmillan. p. 196.
- ^ A Complete System of Shorthand, being an improvement upon all the authors whose systems have yet been made public; is easy to be attained, and may be read again at any distance of time with the greatest certainty; it being properly adapted to the Latin tongue, and all sorts of technical terms, will make it extremely useful for law, physic, or divinity, Lond. 1779, 16 pp. and two plates.
- ^ The Complete Instructor of Shorthand, upon principles applicable to the European languages; also to the technical terms used by anatomists, and more comprehensive and easy to write and to read than any system hitherto published, Lond. 1786.
Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
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