I assume (as @davidad suggested elsethread) that it would be for forming the titles "Mr." and "Dr." I'd imagine it would appear superscripted, which you couldn't get from just typing "r." regularly.
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Ah, I missed
@davidad’s reply. That feels like the right answer. It seems so obvious in hindsight.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @ironicsans @bgzimmer and
Feels very bizarre to have that as a key for that purpose, because it doesn’t save enough effort. But that never stopped typewriter companies looking for an edge.
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Replying to @GlennF @ironicsans and
To confuse matters even more, here is a source that shows both £ and "r." as available characters, which probably disproves my £ theory. https://books.google.com/books?id=m4QNAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA279&dq=remington+%22lower+case%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi2va-sg8HhAhVjFTQIHcZHBo44ChDoAQgyMAI#v=onepage&q=remington%20%22lower%20case%22&f=false …pic.twitter.com/OpcUVC472N
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Oooh.
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Definitely need to see if you can find some typewritten correspondence from the period—maybe etched reproductions in a book of typewritten letters?—to see if the superscript r is there?
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Holy cow. That might be it. You can find keyboards with W/B (waybill) and B/L (bill of lading). See this ad in a railway employees’ mag in 1912.pic.twitter.com/3YfDSLYC6c
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I have a pretty complete set of the first few decades of hundreds of Remington keyboards (incl. some fascinating ones like the ones included here), but this one predates them all – and I don’t see “n.” in any of them, which is so strange! 0_Opic.twitter.com/FxSIp2tkwD
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Oops, I meant “r.”
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I wonder if just like the tricolon, this was just an early bad idea that was quickly nipped in the bud.
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