Mention the words "Seeing Eye," and most people will associate them with guide dogs for the blind and partially sighted. Mention the name "Dorothy Harrison Eustis," and most people will not recognize it, even though she is the woman responsible for founding The Seeing Eye, the first guide dog school in the United States. Since its inception eighty years ago, The Seeing Eye has trained thousands of people who are visually impaired to use guide dogs. The success of the program has spawned guide dog schools across the country and around the world, and the concept has been further expanded to include service dogs for people with other kinds of disabilities. Drawing on correspondence, private papers, and newspaper accounts of the day, Miriam Ascarelli chronicles the life of Dorothy Harrison Eustis revealing both a driven woman and a very private person who shunned media coverage of herself but actively courted it for her organization.
Photo list
Acknowledgments
Preface
Chapter 1. Fancy Homes and Foxhunting
Chapter 2. Married Life
Chapter 3. A Second Marriage
Chapter 4. A Fortunate Experiment
Chapter 5. Paw Prints
Chapter 6. Envisioning the Future
Chapter 7. Assembling the Team
Chapter 8. Dear Students, Your Dog Will Protect You
Chapter 9. A Second Venture: L’Oeil Qui Voit, the Swiss Seeing Eye
Chapter 10. “Hell, I was the first Hippie!”: The Rise and Fall of Adelaide Clifford
Chapter 11. Swimming against the Tide: Bold Moves in a Time of a Depression
Chapter 12. Lessons from Her Father
Chapter 13. The Tea Party Strategy: How Public Access was Achieved
Chapter 14. Dorothy and Her Boys
Chapter 15. A Family Tragedy: Harrison’s Death
Chapter 16. The Curtain Closes
Afterword
Inde