The notes were sprawled across a letter bearing U.S. President Donald Trump’s signature.

In the top left corner: “Have y’all tried grammar style check?”

At the top right: “Federal is capitalized only when used as part of a proper noun.”

And toward the bottom: “OMG this is WRONG!”

The letter, dated May 3 and printed on White House stationery, was addressed to Yvonne Mason, 61, a former high school English teacher who retired in 2017 but hadn’t quite left “grading-paper mode,” she said Sunday.

So when she received the letter in the mail, she pulled out her go-to purple pen and started making corrections. Then she snapped a picture, posted the letter on Facebook and mailed it back to the White House.

“It was a poorly worded missive,” she said. “Poor writing is not something I abide. If someone is capable of doing better, then they should do better.”

Mason, a Democrat who lives in Atlanta, had written to Trump to ask that he visit each family of those who died in the shooting that killed 17 people at a school in Parkland, Florida, in February.

“I had written to them in anger, to tell you the truth,” she said. “I thought he owed it to these grieving families.”

The letter she received did not address her concerns, she said. Instead, it listed a series of actions taken after the shooting, such as listening sessions, meetings with lawmakers and the STOP School Violence Act, a bill that would authorize $500 million (U.S.) over 10 years for safety improvements at schools but had no provisions related to guns.

Then there were the grammatical errors.

“Nation” was capitalized, so was “states.” Mason circled both.

A sentence about a “rule” banning devices that turn legal guns into illegal machine guns was unclear. “Explain ‘rule,’” she wrote.

There was more. Much more.

“If my students turned that in they would get exactly the same marks,” she said.

But she did not correct everything.

“I did not mention the dangling modifier,” she said. “I focused mainly on mechanics.”

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The letter stood in contrast to other letters she has received from politicians, Mason said. Sen. Lindsey Graham sent “beautiful” letters that struck a tone that “makes me more important than him,” she said.

She has written to several legislators in South Carolina, where she taught Advanced Placement English language and composition.

Following up on a New Year’s resolution, she has written a postcard to the White House every day since Jan. 1, she said.

When she was teaching, she wanted to show her students that their voices mattered, even if they weren’t old enough to vote, she said.

“You’re important. You need to be a part of this, you need to pay attention to what’s going on,” she said.

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When word spread about the corrected letter she had sent to the White House, Mason received hundreds of messages from people across the country — some positive (a lawyer in Houston wanted to know if she would be interested in looking over his appellate briefs) and others venomous (one person suggested she “must be a lonely bitter hag with a lot of cats”).

But Mason wasn’t focusing on the negativity.

“Let them have their day, bless their little hearts,” she said. “They aren’t changing my mind.”

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