[Blindtlk] Fwd: REMEMBERING BOB HUNT
David Andrews
dandrews at visi.com
Sun Jul 22 23:12:46 UTC 2012
> From Ed McDonald:
>For many of us the death of Bob Hunt on Friday, July 20, has meant
>the loss of a dear friend and respected colleague. Bob has been very
>much in my thoughts the last couple of days, and I am sure we will
>pay tribute to his life and memory during our upcoming state convention.
>
>Meanwhile, for those who may be interested, I thought I would share
>the tribute that was prepared in 2008 when we inducted Bob into the
>NFBWV Hall of Honor.
>
>Rest in Peace.
>
>Ed
>
>
>
>
>Bob Hunt was born May 22, 1924, and grew up in a Barbour County, WV,
>coal camp. He was eleven years old and in the sixth grade when a
>fellow student gave him a dynamite cap of the kind used in coal
>mining. While examining and playing with the cap, Hunt caused it to
>explode. The explosion destroyed his right eye and caused the loss
>of three fingers on his left hand. Two years later, while in the
>eighth grade, he lost the remaining vision in his left eye.
>
>
>
>Bob enrolled at the West Virginia School for the Blind in 1940 and
>graduated in 1944. He earned his undergraduate degree from Alderson
>Broaddus College in Philippi, WV, and a master's degree from
>Marshall College (now Marshall University) in Huntington, WV. He
>has also completed extensive graduate study at West Virginia University.
>
>
>
>As a young man fresh out of college, he earned a living as a
>merchant and cab dispatcher and even dabbled in the trucking
>business as a coal hauler. At the age of 24, he was elected to the
>first of two two-year terms in the West Virginia House of Delegates,
>representing his home county. Several years later he taught for two
>terms in the public schools of Lincoln County, WV. Then in 1959 he
>joined the faculty of West Virginia Wesleyan College in Buckhannon,
>where he served as a professor of history for nearly 35 years.
>
>
>
>Bob joined the West Virginia Federation of the Blind (now the
>National Federation of the Blind of West Virginia) during the early
>1960s. He was a leader of the newly formed Morgantown chapter while
>attending West Virginia University. He served as second
>vice-president and then as first vice-president of the state
>affiliate before succeeding to the presidency upon the death of
>NFBWV pioneer Chris Cerone. He was then elected to the presidency
>in 1967 and held that position--except for one year--until 1979.
>Since then he has remained active in the organization as a member of
>the board of directors, president of the Members at Large Chapter,
>member of the legislative and agency relations committees, and in
>various other capacities.
>
>
>
>Bob and his wife Ruth are the parents of two adult children, Merrilee and Rob.
>
>
>
>But these are just some of the basic facts of Bob Hunt's
>biography. They are the ingredients of an impressive resume, but
>they tell only part of the story of why he deserves a place in the
>Hall of Honor. His pioneering spirit of independence and
>self-confidence as a blind person; his keen sense of universal
>justice, equality, and human dignity; his strength as a leader; and
>his commitment to lifelong learning are just some of the personal
>qualities that make him worthy of respect and recognition--not just
>by the National Federation of the Blind of West Virginia, but by
>anyone who has had the good fortune to know him as a student, a
>colleague, or a friend.
>
>
>
>Consider, for example, his spirit of independence and self
>confidence as a blind person and how it came to be. At the time Bob
>lost his sight, the creation of a social action organization of
>blind Americans (the National Federation of the Blind) was still
>just a dream in the mind of a scholar and visionary named Jacobus
>tenBroek. Bob's mother and father had no National Organization of
>Parents of Blind Children to turn to for guidance about how to help
>their young son who had suddenly become blind. The only blind
>person Bob himself had ever seen was a street musician with a tin
>cup attached to the neck of his instrument. Otherwise, during those
>pre-war depression days, opportunities for a blind person to live an
>independent and productive life--especially in rural West
>Virginia--were virtually non-existent.
>
>
>
>Neither of Bob's parents had even a high school
>diploma. Nevertheless, they recognized the importance of getting a
>good education and developing a strong sense of personal
>responsibility. They made sure their children did well in school
>and had chores to do at home. Even after the explosion had
>destroyed some of Bob's vision, they insisted that he remain in
>school and complete eighth grade. In addition, Bob's father, who
>worked as a coal miner, set a personal example of courage and
>determination by becoming involved in the labor union movement--an
>unpopular and sometimes even dangerous thing to do at that time in
>the state's history. Even after his father died prematurely in 1939
>at the age of 37, his mother insisted that Bob continue his
>education at the West Virginia School for the Blind in Romney, the
>only viable educational option available to him at that time.
>
>
>
>Despite the school's strong academic program, it was at the School
>for the Blind that Bob first encountered attitudes of low
>expectations and inferiority regarding blind people--even the
>unspoken but very real notion that totally blind people were somehow
>perceived as being inferior to those with so-called "partial
>vision." But he also learned from his fellow students the many
>things that blind people really were able to do, and he discovered
>new and effective ways to bolster his own self-confidence.
>
>
>
>One of those techniques for building self-confidence involved what
>he describes as "breaking the rules of the institution," a technique
>that he occasionally employed in his adult life as well. Things
>like venturing off campus without the requisite "sighted guide";
>finding ways to buy beer at a downtown restaurant; and daring to
>walk across the railroad trestle that spanned the South Branch
>River--these were all activities strictly forbidden by school
>rules. Nevertheless, engaging in such activities--even at some risk
>to one's safety--was one way for a blind teen-ager to assert his
>independence and strengthen his confidence in his own inherent abilities.
>
>
>
>Bob would be quick to remind us that behavior which others may
>regard as simply a display of self assurance on the part of a
>sighted person may be interpreted as arrogance or conceit when
>displayed by a blind person. Nevertheless, this spirit of self
>confidence--call it conceit if you want to--served him well after
>graduating from the School for the Blind. Pursuing a college
>education was not all that common among young blind people in those
>days, and the matter of starting a business of your own was even
>less common. But conducting a campaign, getting elected, and
>serving in the state legislature is still a pretty remarkable
>accomplishment for any young man in his early 20's--not to mention a
>young man in 1948 who happened to be blind.
>
>
>
>In 1959, when Bob joined the faculty of West Virginia Wesleyan
>College, blind people throughout the nation were still struggling to
>secure the fundamental right to organize. Dr. tenBroek and a few
>others had worked their way into academia, but teaching at the
>college level was not, by any means, a popular profession for blind
>persons. It is therefore a testament to his persistence and
>determination as well as his academic credentials that Bob was able
>to secure such a position and make it his life's work for more than
>three decades.
>
>
>
>He continued, however, to hold his employer to the same standards of
>non-discrimination that he would expect from anyone else. Although
>he had not earned a Ph.D., he became eligible after fifteen years of
>teaching for advancement to the rank of full professor. Years
>passed, however, and he received no such advancement, while
>colleagues in similar situations were becoming full professors. He
>recognized a blatant case of discrimination based on blindness and
>carefully considered how to respond. Finally--despite advice from
>friends and colleagues not to make waves, he ultimately decided to
>file a complaint with the West Virginia Human Rights Commission, a
>right that had been secured several years earlier through the
>efforts of the Federation. The Commission ruled in his favor, and
>the college complied appropriately.
>
>
>
>It was virtually inevitable that Bob should become involved in the
>work of the National Federation of the Blind. His father's example
>as a union miner taught him the value of collective action as a way
>to solve social and economic problems and bring about needed social
>change. His legislative experience taught him something about how
>to bring about change through the political system. What's more,
>that sense of independence and self-confidence assured him that the
>principles which the Federation fought for were indeed right.
>
>
>
>He led the Organized Blind Movement well in West Virginia--expanding
>the membership and forming new chapters, raising the necessary funds
>to support the organization, raising public awareness of blindness
>issues and the accomplishments of blind people, and supporting the
>passage of vital legislation in such areas as basic human rights for
>blind West Virginians. One of his crowning moments occurred when he
>confronted Governor Arch Moore in a public forum. While Moore
>addressed a statewide gathering of individuals leading up to the
>White House Conference on Disability, Bob challenged the governor's
>alleged acts of political cronyism that had seriously weakened the
>state's Randolph-Sheppard vending program, a major source of
>employment for blind West Virginians.
>
>
>
>On a very personal level, Bob and Ruth were successful in navigating
>through the process of adopting two children. Back in the 1960's
>and even today, this is an area in which blind persons often face
>unwarranted challenges and discrimination.
>
>
>
>These are but a few snapshots from the life of Robert L. Hunt--a
>life that stands as both a positive example and an inspiration for
>blind people everywhere. It seems almost prophetic that the letter
>L, the middle initial in his name, stands for Loyal. Throughout his
>life he has remained "loyal" to those fundamental principles of
>equality and justice that have sustained him and given him the
>strength and determination to achieve so much.
>
>
>
>There is far more to the story of Robert Loyal Hunt than space here
>allows, but surely this is enough to establish his worthiness of the
>honor that we have bestowed upon him.
>
>
>
>Bob, we call you our colleague with respect, we call you our friend
>with love, and we are proud to receive you into the Hall of Honor of
>the National Federation of the Blind of West Virginia.
>
>
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