Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Washington School for the Blind

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Built
  
1911 (1911)

Opened
  
1911

Phone
  
+1 360-696-6321

Added to NRHP
  
14 May 1993

NRHP Reference #
  
93000370

Area
  
2 ha

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Washington School for the Blind

Location
  
2214 East 13th Street, Vancouver, Washington

Address
  
e, 2214 E 13th St, Vancouver, WA 98661, United States

Similar
  
Clark County Historical, Fort Vancouver National, Fort Vancouver, YMCA Camp Orkila, Skagit Valley Tulip Fest

Profiles

The Washington School for the Blind, also known as the Washington State School for the Blind, is a school for visually-impaired, blind, or deaf-blind students, located in Vancouver, Washington in the United States. The school building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1993.

Contents

History

In 1886, the Washington Territory Legislature established the State School for Defective Youth in Vancouver, Washington. The act established a "school for the deaf, mute, blind, and feeble minded". Louis Sohns and Charles Brown raised money from local civic leaders, purchased property, and built buildings for the school. They were also added as trustees for the school.

In 1891, School Director James Watson recommended that the "feeble minded" be separated from the blind and deaf students. They were relocated to another facility nearby. In 1906, the "feeble minded" were relocated to a state school at Medical Lake in Eastern Washington (now called Lakeland Village). The Vancouver school's name was changed to the State School for the Deaf and Blind, with the blind students moved the former facility for the "feeble minded".

In 1913, the two schools were officially separated by names, the State School for the Blind, and the State School for the Deaf.

Notable alumni

Jazz singer and pianist Diane Schuur, blind since birth from retinopathy of prematurity, attended the Washington State School for the Blind from ages four to seven, in the late 1950s to early 1960s. She lived in Vancouver at the school but was able to commute home by train to suburban Seattle on her own. In her twenties, her talent was recognized by jazz musicians Dizzie Gillespie and Stan Getz. She has made over 20 albums including the Grammy-winning Diane Schuur & the Count Basie Orchestra. She has performed around the world at venues including Carnegie Hall, The White House and the Kennedy Center. Schuur was awarded the Helen Keller Achievement Award in 2000 by the American Foundation for the Blind.

Later history

In 2008, the school hosted a "tactile museum of natural history" experience and fundraiser called Sensory Safari. The event benefitted the Washington School for the Blind Foundation, which supports student activities and funds technology and equipment for the school.

References

Washington School for the Blind Wikipedia