In many instances new letters were made up to represent a specific sound
in a particular language that wasn't covered by the existing alphabet.
The most obvious example are diacritics - which I would argue the R with
tail is. Many of these characters came to life, particularly in Africa,
during the 19th Century when missionaries roamed the continent and
transliterated the native language into written form using the Latin
alphabet. And they found themselves lacking in letters.

Not being designers they simply took what was there already and adapted
it with fairly little regard to typographic history and sensitivity. The
Eszett is such a case, too. No one could be bothered, back in the metal
type days, to actually design a proper cap version - instead they simply
used the lowercase form since it was there already. Unfortunately, when
the glyph finally had an official status the lowercase form was already
so impregnated in people's minds that it had become the defacto design
without any regard to the structures of capital shapes v lowercases.

Regardless of my opinion of this character, I would suggest that we
actually do have an opportunity here to design a 'real' form that
matches the architecture of cap characters, not simply ape a shape that
has sneaked its way in.

-- 
Expansion: 'ẞ' LATIN CAPTIAL LETTER SHARP S (U+1E9E)
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/650498
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