WSJ obituary / English Journalist Couldnt Bear Abuse’s of the Apostrophe ....................
  May 5, 2021      
  English Journalist Couldnt Bear Abuse’s of the Apostrophe           
  John Richards, who has died at age 97, founded a society to promote correct punctuation
                                                             John Richards, a retired English journalist, founded the  Apostrophe Protection Society in 2001.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  By James R. Hagerty
  Retirees  are often urged to find new activities and causes. After a career as a  newspaper reporter and editor in England,                       John  Richards          took up the role of defending the apostrophe, an often  abused punctuation mark.
               When he started   the Apostrophe Protection Society   in 2001, there were only two members, Mr. Richards and his son,   Stephen. Soon, however, he had more than 250 members, and some made   unsolicited cash donations. Letters and emails arrived from all over   with examples of misuse of the apostrophe. Many offenders left the   apostrophe out of possessive phrases or inserted the mark where it   wasn’t needed, as in market signs advertising “apple’s.”
   Then  the crusade ran into resistance. Mr.  Richards told the Daily Mail that  he spotted a restaurant advertising  “coffee’s.” He offered free advice.  “I said very politely, ‘It’s not  needed. It’s a plural,’” Mr. Richards  said. “But the man said: ‘I think  it looks better with an apostrophe.’  And what can you say to that?”
               In 2019, he shut down his campaign. “The barbarians have won,” he said.
                             “I’m just not as enthusiastic as I was,” Mr.  Richards said. “I  think it may be an age thing, but somehow the  apostrophe doesn’t seem to  matter to me as much as it did.”
               Mr. Richards died of sepsis on March 30. He was 97.
                John Belton Richards, the son of a postal worker and a shop   employee, was born Sept. 17, 1923, in London. He spent his career   working at newspapers in London and southeast England. After retiring   from the West Sussex Gazette in 1988, he lived in Boston, England.
                                                                                                   ‘I think a lot of the change now is  due to laziness and ignorance. It’s going downhill.’                
   -- John Richards               
                                                                                                                                                                               When he wasn’t campaigning, he painted with  watercolors, drew  pictures and participated in a local theatrical  group. He is survived by  two children and a grandson.
                In defending the apostrophe, he tried to avoid hectoring or   insulting anyone. His typical letter of advice opened like this: “Dear   Sir or Madam, Because there seems to be some doubt about the use of the   apostrophe, we are taking the liberty of drawing your attention to an   incorrect use.”
               He accepted the natural evolution of  language. “Of course  English is changing,” he told the Washington Post  in 2009. “If the  change is an improvement, yes, that’s fine. I think a  lot of the change  now is due to laziness and ignorance. It’s going  downhill.”
               Grammar, he said, “is a valued part of our civilization.”
                He chose his battles, however, rather than taking on all  abuses  of grammar and usage. In a 2001 interview with the New York  Times, he  said: “The incorrect use of ‘fewer’ and ‘less’ is another  thing that  annoys me. If I carry on, I’ll get quite worked up.” 
                                                                                                        Write to James R. Hagerty at  bob.hagerty@wsj.com
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