Subject: Deciphering fire damaged documents
The following extract from 'Workshop Receipts for Manufacturers and Scientific Amateurs', Volume III, 1924, was passed to me by Martin Hinchcliffe, Weapons Conservator. I thought that it would be of interest to Cons DistList members. "Deciphering Burnt Documents: Rathelot, an officer of the Paris law courts, succeeded in an ingenious manner in transcribing a number of the registers that were burnt during the Commune. These registers remained so long in the fire that each seemed to have become a homogeneous block, more like a slab of charcoal than anything else, and when an attempt was made to detach a leaf it fell away into powder. Many scientific men examined these unpromising black blocks, when Rathelot hit upon the following method of operation: In the first place, he cut off the back of the book so as to leave nothing but the mass of leaves which the fire had caused to adhere together; he then steeped the book in water, and afterwards exposed it, all wet as it was, to the heat at the mouth of a furnace; the water, as it evaporated, raised the leaves one by one and they could be separated, but with extreme cautions. Each sheet was then deciphered and transcribed. The appearance of the pages was very curious; the writing appeared of a dull black, while the paper was of a lustrous black, something like velvet decorations on a black satin ground; so that the entries were not difficult to read." This volume is fascinating. It contains many recipes for the colouring of paper and instructions on how to make many different types of paper. Lorraine Finch *** Conservation DistList Instance 17:66 Distributed: Thursday, April 15, 2004 Message Id: cdl-17-66-004 ***Received on Tuesday, 13 April, 2004