Corporate entry: Blind, Deaf and Dumb Institution

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The Blind, Deaf and Dumb Institution opened in North Hobart in 1898 after a decade of preparation by the Society for the Blind Deaf and Dumb. The Society's objectives were education, industrial training and advancement in life of their protégés. The Institution provided a centre for a school, factory and welfare section where these objectives could be met. The school, which opened in 190 received significant help from the Braille Writers' Association, which was set up in 1897. It still operates from its original library, established in North Hobart in 1928. Later developments included a new factory, occupational therapy and recreational facilities for adults, the Lord Fraser Home for the Aged, and the introduction of talking books.

A review of the Society's operations by Arthur Young in 1986 recommended that services for the blind and deaf should be separated, with responsibility transferred to the Royal Guide Dogs for the Blind, and a new Tasmanian Deaf Society respectively. So the Institution's work ended in 1987, when its assets were gradually sold and its activities mainstreamed. Its centenary year heralded its demise. However, the Royal Tasmanian Society for the Blind and Deaf, which had managed the Institution, continued as a trustee organisation. The Society's buildings now form part of the Rydges Hotel complex.

Joy Smith

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