In August 1906, President
Theodore Roosevelt issued an order from his summer residence in Oyster Bay, New York, that would soon be the talk of Washington—and the world beyond.
Addressing himself to the government printer, Roosevelt decreed that all documents issued by the
White House should now follow the spellings advocated by an organization known as the Simplified Spelling Board.
Launched the previous March and financed by the steel baron Andrew Carnegie, the board wanted to strip the American language of its antiquated British baggage and create a clean and modern version for the 20th century.
A few words were changed, but nothing of significance, had it done so, the chances are, spoken English would have become as fragmented as the Romance languages of French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese and Romanian, which once all spoke Latin. Then where would we be on our forum?