Noreen I really appreciate your finding and sharing this amazing article with us! Have a wonderful weekend,Deb<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Wed, May 15, 2013 at 11:05 PM, Esther Levegnale <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:elevegnale@sbcglobal.net" target="_blank">elevegnale@sbcglobal.net</a>></span> wrote:<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;padding-left:1ex;border-left-color:rgb(204,204,204);border-left-width:1px;border-left-style:solid">Hi, Noreen,<br>
<br>
Thanks for sharing that article with us. Mr. Sullivan sounds like a really spunky and feisty guy!<br>
<br>
Esther<br>
<br>
Sent from Esther's Amazing iPhone!<br>
<div><div class="h5"><br>
On May 15, 2013, at 7:46 PM, <a href="mailto:noreen@youcandoastronomy.com">noreen@youcandoastronomy.com</a> wrote:<br>
<br>
> There was an interesting article in the New Britain Herald newspaper last<br>
> Sunday about a blind reporter.I emailed the editor so see if he could send<br>
> me an electronic version of the story that I could share. I've pasted the<br>
> story to this posting. (see below)<br>
><br>
> - Noreen Grice<br>
><br>
><br>
> With the help of a Seeing Eye Dog,<br>
> a blind reporter saw more than most<br>
><br>
><br>
> Everybody who walked into Arthur Sullivan’s well-appointed and<br>
> immaculately kept home office on Richard Street got the same joyful<br>
> greeting: a big grin, invariably followed by the line, “Say, you’re<br>
> looking good.” The typical response was a hearty laugh. Sullivan, one of<br>
> the state’s best-known citizens of his day, was totally blind and<br>
> everybody knew it.<br>
> That however did not keep him from succeeding in a profession where keen<br>
> powers of observation are not merely an asset, but a requirement. He was a<br>
> newspaper reporter and a good one.<br>
> The longtime city resident covered the New Britain-Bristol area for the<br>
> Bridgeport Herald for many years.<br>
> He also wrote an often humorous and sometimes absolutely hilarious weekly<br>
> column titled, “As seen by a Blind Man.” Obviously, Sullivan did not take<br>
> himself too seriously, but the opposite is true of his job.<br>
> Early in his career, he hired a young man to accompany him on his<br>
> newsgathering rounds. But he soon discovered that folks were often<br>
> reticent to talk freely with a third person present.<br>
> That pretty much convinced him to spend a month at the Seeing Eye Inc. in<br>
> Morristown, N.J., where he was trained to work with a guide dog.<br>
> Although he did confess to some ambivalence about the partnership, he<br>
> managed to overcome his fear that even a highly trained guide dog might do<br>
> the natural thing and chase a cat once in a while, making him the<br>
> “unwilling middleman in a scrap.” He stayed for the training and came home<br>
> to New Britain with a canine “assistant.”<br>
> “Boda,” his first Seeing Eye Dog, became almost as well known around<br>
> Central Connecticut as Sullivan himself. And his sources had no problem<br>
> telling him everything he needed to know with the big German Shepard<br>
> present.<br>
> When “Boda” passed away in 1943, “Sully,” as he was known to hundreds of<br>
> friends and admirers across the state, went back to New Jersey and<br>
> acquired “Trumbull,” a boxer who was the constant companion of the<br>
> reporter and his wife Agnes (Wall) Sullivan, who was blind since birth.<br>
> The writer himself lost his sight at the age of 23. While he was away, he<br>
> wrote to at least a couple of friends here saying, “My trainer tells me<br>
> ‘Trumbull’ looks like me — broad chest, heavy jowls, big smile and all<br>
> that. Just remember when you see us; I shall be the one with the hat.”<br>
> Another close “friend” was the portable Braille writer given to him by the<br>
> New Britain Lions Club.<br>
> The device, which he carried in a holster over his shoulder, allowed him<br>
> to take notes quickly and simply, as any other reporter would with pencil<br>
> and paper.<br>
> Largely self-educated, but unquestionably very bright, Sullivan<br>
> successfully held down an office job at the Stanley Works in the<br>
> pre-Depression era and ran his own newsstand on Main Street before<br>
> convincing the editors at the Bridgeport Herald in 1928 that a blind<br>
> reporter could do just as good a job of covering the news as a sighted<br>
> one.<br>
> Although he is believed to have left school after finishing the eighth<br>
> grade, he was said to have been extremely well-versed in history, politics<br>
> and obviously in current events.<br>
> Shortly after losing his vision, he enlisted a small army of friends who<br>
> read to him extensively from books, magazines and newspapers every day. He<br>
> also kept abreast of the news and built a vast store of knowledge through<br>
> radio.<br>
> “Sully” was a longtime member of St. Mary’s Church and the New Britain<br>
> Press Club as a well as an honorary member of the American Newspaper<br>
> Guild. He was just 56 years old when he died here in 1951.<br>
> This article was originally published April 24, 2011. The late Bart Fisher<br>
> was a columnist for the Herald as well as its longtime sports editor.<br>
><br>
><br>
><br>
><br>
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