Aulay Macaulay (died 1788) was an 18th-century English tea-dealer, based in Manchester, who invented a system of shorthand which could be used in English and many other languages. He died on 19 March 1788, in Manchester.[1][2]
In the 18th century Macaulay invented a system of shorthand, which he named "Polygraphy". His system was documented in a self-printed book titled Polygraphy or Shorthand Made Easy to the Meanest Capacity Being an Universal Character Fitted to All Languages Which may be learnt by this Book without the help of a Master, published in 1747. In order to ward off possible pirated editions of his work, Macaulay personally signed each copy, and wrote within the book: "whoever presumes to pirate my Book, will be prosecuted with the utmost Rigour".[3]
^Cook, Barbara Collier; Cook, James Wyatt (2004), Man-Midwife, Male Feminist: The Life and Times of George Macaulay, M.D., PH. D., (1716–1766), Scholarly Publishing Office (University of Michigan), pp. 181–182, ISBN1-4181-6285-X
^"The Stenographic Collection". Dresden Treasures: The Special Collections of the Saxon State and University Library (www.mdpls.org). Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2009.
Further reading
Hodgkinson, J.L; Pogson, Rex (1960), The early Manchester theatre, A. Blond for the Society for Theatre Research