devildeac wrote:
Oops. Sorry. Seriously. My apologies. No kidding. No smilies.
I have been reading about your trip/work in Charleston and have been fascinated so far. We've been there several times over the last decade and were most interested as we took the self-guided historical tour along the Battery about 3 years ago. Great stuff.
No worries guys; I'm not really upset. It's just that the joke had been run into the ground. Thanks for being penitent, and for taking an interest in my research.
rockymtn devil wrote:
What was the 18th Century lottery like? Is lottery something that has undergone drastic changes (beyond, obviously, inflationary changes) over the last 300+ years?
And, given your baseball allegiances, are you as bored as I am waiting out this rain delay?
I really dunno how the lottery worked back then, though I suspect it was more or less the same. As for the rain delay, it didn't bother me too much. I had actually been invited to Kiawah Island for the day/evening with a good friend from Duke. We entertained ourselves during the delay with cocktails and the ten-foot alligator just steps off the back deck.
colchar wrote:
Are you finding it difficult to decipher the handwriting? I'm a modernist and I sometimes still have trouble deciphering the marginalia in official documents from the 1945-1970 period. I can't imagine having to read handwriting from your era - the combination of syntax and penmanship must make it quite a chore. Did you take a course to help you with this before embarking on your research trip? A friend of mine did so before joining us in London last year. Then again, she is an early modernist so I expect that the handwriting she was looking at would be much worse than the stuff you are reading.
The handwriting is
very difficult, especially when we're dealing with stuff that may or may not have held up very well over the years. I'm in a decent rhythm with it, and haven't yet really been stumped on anything, though there are times when a) it's really slow, difficult going and/or b) I just have to throw my hands up and confess that I have no idea what a given word (or smudge, as the case may be) is. I did not take a class for this before I came, so I'm learning on the fly, but it really hasn't been much of a problem.