[Nd-talk] FW: Women's History Month

Milton Ota mota1252 at gmail.com
Fri Mar 1 13:24:33 UTC 2019


                

 

From: The Blind History Lady <theblindhistorylady at gmail.com> 
Sent: Friday, March 1, 2019 5:30 AM
To: mota1252 at gmail.com
Subject: Women's History Month

 


The real first blind woman lawyer 












 



. 

Dear Blind History Lady Fans;

 

This year has been a very busy time for the Blind History Lady. I have visited several libraries in Washington D. C. and Maryland to research more regarding our blind ancestors. My trip was a huge success! I have much material to sift through, sort and follow up on to combine into stories and pass along to you. 

 

I enjoyed addressing the NFB of Maryland’s Central chapter in February while I was there. We had a lively discussion about Jim Ivy. If any of you would like me to address your classes, community groups or church groups, please contact me and we can work out an arrangement through Facetime or the telephone. I would love to present more about my subjects to you than I have time for in this email.

 

Now to this month’s subject. March is Woman’s History Month and I had the difficult task to pick only one blind woman to celebrate in this month’s email. I chose Lillian Blanche Fearing, a blind Iowan who left a mark in the Midwest at the turn of the twentieth century.

 

Lillian Blanche Fearing was born in 1863 in Davenport Iowa. As a child, she injured her eyes and lost her sight. She first continued in the local schools, but could not keep up. Her parents sent her to the Iowa College for the Blind in Vinton where she learned to read and write in Braille and to solve life’s puzzles thrown at blind persons every day. 

 

While in school, she took music classes, began a theater club, enjoyed literature and sharing all of her passions with her fellow classmates. 

 

She graduated from the school in 1884 as the class Valedictorian. After graduation, Blanche learned of a new device, a typewriter that would allow her to better communicate with the sighted world. Blanche bought herself a typewriter and quickly taught herself to type. With her typewriter, she took correspondence classes. After completing the classes, she would then teach others, including fellow classmates from the College for the Blind. 

 

Her poems were being published in local papers. A book of poems of hers, “The Sleeping Word” came out and was being sold in many places in Iowa and the neighboring states. The publisher required Blanche to sell the first printing on her own. If there were a second or more editions and the publisher would promote across their territories. And there was a second edition. It was up to Blanche to canvas door-to0door as well as visiting book stores, general stores, women’s clubs, churches and anyone who would purchase a few copies of her book to re-sell in their establishments.

 

Friends suggested that blanche use her blindness to promote her book. She steadfastly refused to do so. Her work was to stand on its own merit, not on pity. Another fear was that her work would only be seen as that of a “blind girl”. With the stereotypes of the sighted, she felt that her blindness would cause the general public to hot take her seriously Let it be a surprise to the audience when the came to hear her lecture after purchasing her book. 

 

Religion was an important part of her life. She read not just theological books, but also magazines such as “Home Mission Monthly.” When articles of letters touched her greatly, she responded with letters to the editor. In one letter Fearing addressed the problems of rural working women as missionaries in the United States 

 

In 1888, Blanche and her mother moved to Chicago so she could attend the Union College of Law. Fearing was the only blind student and the only woman in her class. Her mother was her reader and went to classes with her daughter. She graduated in 1890 and set up her own law office in Chicago.

 

Sister Marion also moved to Chicago and became her sister’s secretary/assistant. Marion went to school and became a court reporter. For eight years they ran a successful, all-woman shop. 

 

Blanche had gotten to know many influential women in the Chicago area, such as Mrs. Potter Palmer. Mrs. Palmer helped to get Blanche appointed to a committee of the Women's Department of the World's Fair. During the World's Fair, Blanche gave a speech to those assembled concerning the status of women.

 

Fearing continued to write her poetry. Through her work she met many individuals in the literary circles. She also met many influential women in the Chicago and surrounding area. 

 

She wrote books that are still available today on Amazon. Look for “In The City By The Lake”, “The Sleeping World And Other Poems” and “The Island Lilly.”

 

Many sources attribute Christine Blanche LaBarraque as being the first blind woman lawyer in the United States. Ms. LaBarraque was the first blind woman to pass the bar in California about 1896. Fearing had been a lawyer for six years by that time making her the first blind woman attorney in the United States.. 

 

Blanch never married or had children to honor her memory. What she has left are her books. You can read more about Lillian Blanche Fearing in my book ”The First Things I Learned” at  <http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001OtSc-i8bu9RgkcMsUVek6M-U4517PNUswE480XIED4jb0GxSIrm1V0ZAfB5_TeRrdVp_P13YT618b2EBSZTSzz6YxfJMnsLuS5PSwpMAlB2QLbD24CHbLSr1-Ip7ni2Q65XtZ37EGNkdNaQJGOS8oQ==&c=aMWaICKZC9qEZTbLZvxSkUOnJe06lTlbXgYJKPwA0fQ5KVoTrKc61w==&ch=yuMPxYejwR1tKsg9h-hWuRYDCQ5_z5UtfrWDOe4PacSLfQ1KMKW6Rw==> www.smashwords.com. Check out this book and my other works by searching for The Blind History Lady. 

 

You can read more of my Books at   <http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001OtSc-i8bu9RgkcMsUVek6M-U4517PNUswE480XIED4jb0GxSIrm1VyYiFFQF5HNlrVGrshhfLHeZZc1h4nNcxDIxqRF822dW_7x1TkO0bEtr3ayUQz-4rqnY7rs3g8T-bJ6jCNF0D-awPNTx92VwoyJ0W1GwP3XsVtP1AffFBTz8rEgM9tfsHQ==&c=aMWaICKZC9qEZTbLZvxSkUOnJe06lTlbXgYJKPwA0fQ5KVoTrKc61w==&ch=yuMPxYejwR1tKsg9h-hWuRYDCQ5_z5UtfrWDOe4PacSLfQ1KMKW6Rw==> https://www.smashwords.com 

 

 

 







 



www.theblindhistorylady.com

.

 



‌

	

 




The Blind History Lady | 14152 E Linvale Pl, 201, Aurora, CO 80014 



 <https://visitor.constantcontact.com/do?p=un&m=001Cab_UttHGCg-764tpYXcSQ%3D&ch=79aaaad0-68fe-11e8-9c49-d4ae527548e1&ca=22cb8e74-2e9a-4dd8-aec0-b627d0b8f8fb> Unsubscribe mota1252 at gmail.com 


 <https://visitor.constantcontact.com/do?p=oo&m=001Cab_UttHGCg-764tpYXcSQ%3D&ch=79aaaad0-68fe-11e8-9c49-d4ae527548e1&ca=22cb8e74-2e9a-4dd8-aec0-b627d0b8f8fb> Update Profile |  <http://www.constantcontact.com/legal/service-provider?cc=about-service-provider> About our service provider 


Sent by  <mailto:theblindhistorylady at gmail.com> theblindhistorylady at gmail.com in collaboration with 



 <http://www.constantcontact.com/index.jsp?cc=nge> 


 <http://www.constantcontact.com/index.jsp?cc=nge> Try it free today 

 

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nd-talk_nfbnet.org/attachments/20190301/7990232e/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: ~WRD000.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 823 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nd-talk_nfbnet.org/attachments/20190301/7990232e/attachment.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 524 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nd-talk_nfbnet.org/attachments/20190301/7990232e/attachment-0001.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image002.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 332 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nd-talk_nfbnet.org/attachments/20190301/7990232e/attachment-0002.jpg>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image003.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 878 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://nfbnet.org/pipermail/nd-talk_nfbnet.org/attachments/20190301/7990232e/attachment-0003.jpg>


More information about the ND-Talk mailing list