Duxbury Systems Proudly Presents:

Documents on Automated Braille Production:

An Historical Resource

Book about Automated Braille Production, representing the entire collection of documents

What is this All About?

This is a collection of documents, mostly pdf files, all saved on one server. The documents are organized chronologically. This archive contains documents related to blindness, braille, the automation of braille, and many other topics. For more information about the purpose of this collection, the sources, and the stories contained in it, please follow this link.

Master Index of these items and many sub items.

This file is companion to History of Braille and the Early Education of the Blind


History of Braille and the Early Education of the Blind

Duxbury Systems Proudly Presents:

History of Braille and the Early Education of the Blind:

An Historical Resource

Louis Braille

Through researching these works, I have learned that in the 18th and 19th centuries, there was a very vigorous intellectual debate on the education of the blind and the deaf-blind. Was the deaf-blind person who learned to read and write truly educated as a sighted person was? Or was this disabled person like a computer app, just able to respond to stimuli in pre-programmed ways? It is clear that these books on the education of the blind were widely read and discussed in educated circles. The education of Laura Bridgeman and Helen Keller were the astonishing moon shots of their era. So, Duxbury Systems proudly presents these documents so that others can appreciate how at one time, the education of the sensory disabled was a subject of intense interest.


Modern Documents


Historical Documents (organized by date of publication)

Early Years

The Chronology

1960's

1970's

1980's

1990's

2000's


BOSTON, FEB. 1--COMPUTER TO OPEN A WHOLE NEW WORLD FOR THE BLIND--Janet Fields chairman of the Braille Transcribing Division of the National Braille Press in Boston, examines copy from computerized braille system developed at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The system translates English, as it is typed, into clusters of raised dots on paper. These dots can be read by the finger-tip touch of a blind person's hand. In the past, using a hand embossing machine, it took six to seven minutes to press one page. The new system can press 20 to 30 pages a minute. (AP WIREPHOTO) This Photo is dated 02/02/72.


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