[DSM-Iowa] Iowa History month
Rebecca Young
byoung at nfbi.org
Tue Apr 30 23:49:00 UTC 2024
Good evening members,
Here is an article that Anil Lewis requested that I send out. He would like
for you to read it before our May 11th meeting.
Iowa History Month: How Kenneth Jernigan transformed life for Iowans with
blindness
<https://www.aol.com/> Gannett
BETTINA DOLINSEK AND CODY DOLINSEK
March 10, 2024 at 6:03 AM
". the real problem is not the blindness but the mistaken attitudes about
it. These attitudes can be changed, and we are changing them. The sighted
can also change. They can be shown that we are in no way inferior to them
and that the old ideas were wrong that we are able to compete with the
sighted, play with the sighted, work with the sighted, and live with the
sighted on terms of complete equality. We the blind can also come to
recognize these truths, and we can live by them."
These words were spoken by Kenneth Jernigan, the then-president of the
National Federation of the Blind, in 1973. He was also at that time the
director of the Iowa Commission for the Blind, today known as the Iowa
Department for the Blind.
Iowa has long been recognized as innovative with respect to the blind,
seeing the need to enable the blind to compete on a footing of equality
socially, politically and economically.
Becoming a state in 1846, by 1852 Iowans were already considering how to
better the prospects for Iowa's blind population. That year, Samuel Bacon, a
blind graduate of Kenyon College with a degree in mathematics, established
the Asylum for the Blind in Iowa City. By 1854, the school was relocated to
Vinton. Its goal was to produce blind people who were "educated, productive,
well-rounded, [who] have friends and [who] hold their place in society."
Perhaps the most famous graduate of this institution, what later was renamed
the Iowa Braille and Sight Saving School, was Mary Ingalls.
On New Year's Day, 1922, Helen Keller visited Des Moines. Des Moines
Register reporter Harlan Miller covered her visit. While there, Keller
addressed the Legislature, stating that "it seems to me the civilization of
a state should be measured by the amount of misery it resents, and by the
degree of happiness it makes possible for all of its citizens." About the
thunderous applause following these words, Keller stated she heard the
applause "through the soles of her feet."
Sen. James White of Tama County had introduced a bill "providing for the
creation of a state commission to supervise training and seek employment for
Iowa's blind." The requested "biennial appropriation" for this new state
commission was $26,000. Keller indicated to the Legislature that the funds
should be doubled. Thus, Keller paved the way for what eventually became the
Iowa Commission for the Blind in 1925.
At first, the Iowa Commission for the Blind was like other agencies for the
blind throughout the United States. In Brian Miller's 2013 dissertation,
published by the University of Iowa, "Speaking for Themselves: The Blind
Civil Rights Movement and the Battle for the Iowa Braille School," he
described the Commission for the Blind under the directorship of Ethel Towne
Holmes as follows: "The Iowa commission was a sleepy backwater, an agency
with poor performance, and off the radar for most rehabilitation
professionals."
Holmes served the agency from 1925 until 1957. At age 74, Holmes had likely
lost her spark for innovative services and resigned as the organization
stagnated and criticism by Iowans with blindness increased. Miller wrote,
"In the year before Jernigan's appointment it [the Iowa Commission for the
Blind] ranked at the very bottom among VR (vocational rehabilitation)
agencies for the blind, with only 12 employment outcomes in 1957."
In 1958, Kenneth Jernigan began his directorship of the Iowa Commission for
the Blind, serving the agency until 1978. Under his leadership, the
Commission became an innovative agency, increasing the number of employed
blind people, fulfilling the promise that "with reasonable training and
opportunity the average blind person can compete on terms of equality with
the average sighted person similarly situated." Jernigan would face his own
turmoil and left Iowa with some criticizing his use of state funds, among
other complaints. Jernigan's departure disrupted services for two decades.
Blind Iowans, thanks to the innovations of Jernigan and others, work
together as members of blindness consumer groups such as the National
Federation of the Blind and the Iowa Council of the United Blind, to pass
legislation mandating accessible mail-in ballot voting, for example. In
1968, Harold Russell, of President Lyndon Johnson's Committee on the
Employment of the Handicapped, when presenting Johnson's award to Jernigan
for his work on behalf of the blind, said, "if a person must be blind, it is
better to be blind in Iowa than in any other place in the nation, or the
world!"
Bettina Dolinsek an*/ Cody Dolinsek are history and program consultants for
the State Historical Society of Iowa, which provided this essay as part of a
series for Iowa History Month. For more information, visit history.iow.gov.
This article originally appeared on Des Moines Register:
<https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/life/2024/03/10/iowa-history-month-
how-kenneth-jernigan-transformed-life-for-iowans-with-blindness/72858033007/
> Iowa History Month: How Iowa led the country in equality for the blind
Show comments If you have any questions please contact me at my information
listed below.
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