Research Catalog

Perkins School for the Blind / Kimberly French for Perkins School for the Blind.

Title
Perkins School for the Blind / Kimberly French for Perkins School for the Blind.
Author
French, Kimberly.
Publication
Charleston, SC : Arcadia, 2004.

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TextRequest in advance HV1796.M393 W384 2004Off-site

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Additional Authors
Perkins School for the Blind.
Description
128 p. : ill.; 24 cm.
Summary
[Publisher-supplied data] Founded in Boston in 1829, Perkins School for the Blind was the first school of its kind in the United States. Perkins pioneered education for people who are deafblind when seven-year-old Laura Bridgman became the first deafblind person to learn language, in 1837. Fifty years later, alumna Annie Sullivan used the same methods to teach Helen Keller, the deafblind Perkins student who became one of the foremost humanitarians of the twentieth century. The school also pioneered the first kindergarten for the blind and the first training programs for teachers of the blind and deafblind. Perkins School for the Blind pays tribute to this groundbreaking institution and its legacy of establishing education programs that bring hope and dignity to more than forty thousand people with blindness and deafblindness worldwide.
Series Statement
Campus history series
Uniform Title
Campus history series.
Subject
  • Perkins School for the Blind
  • Perkins School for the Blind > History
  • Schools
  • History, 21st Century
  • History, 20th Century
  • History, 19th Century
  • Education of Hearing Disabled
  • Education of Visually Disabled
  • Deafblind people > History. > Watertown
  • Blind > History. > Watertown
  • Massachusettes
  • Massachusettes
Genre/Form
History
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 128).
ISBN
0738535990
LCCN
  • ^^2004103265
  • 9780738535999
OCLC
57179321
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library