Free learning resources from arts, cultural and heritage organisations.

Forming a Charity for Blinded Servicemen

During the First World War, there was no such thing as free medical care or support for differently abled people in Britain. The National Health Service (NHS) did not yet exist and there was little help except the workhouse or charities. 

Blind people were not expected to lead useful, independent lives. Their place in society would have been very uncertain. 

Black and white photo of band members with their instruments, including drums, trumpets, flute and tambourine.
The St Dunstan's Band During the First World War

When thousands of servicemen began returning from the Front with serious, long-lasting injuries, they needed help to recover and adjust. St Dunstan’s, founded in 1915, was a pioneering organisation which provided training and care for soldiers, sailors, airmen, and women who had been blinded during war work. 

Black and white photograph showing soldiers and St. Dunstan's staff. Soldiers are wearing suits with their medals pinned to their jackets.
Members of St Dunstan's During the First World War

Many servicemen returned from the trenches blinded by gas attacks, bullet or shrapnel wounds, or trauma. Women were also blinded during war service or accidents in munitions factories. 

A Charity for Blinded Servicemen

Sir Arthur Pearson, the founder of the Daily Express newspaper, understood the situation these blind servicemen were facing. He was losing his sight due to glaucoma, but when advised to give up his business, he had vowed, ‘I shall soon be blind but I will never be a blind man, I am going to be the blind man.’ 

Black and white photograph of some blind veterans on a see-saw with VAD nurses.
Members of St Dunstan's with VADs during the First World War

On 29 January 1915, Pearson founded The Blinded Soldiers and Sailors Care Committee (later renamed St Dunstan's and now known as Blind Veterans UK). Its goal, radical for the time, was to provide vocational training rather than charity, so that blinded servicemen and women could lead independent and productive lives.

Glossary

Committee - A group of people who work together for a cause

Facilities - Something for people to use

Founder - Someone who starts something new

Glaucoma - An eye illness that damages sight

National Health Service - Government provision of free healthcare to all citizens

Pioneering - The first to do something

Productive - Making something or seeing results

Radical - Something that wants or makes big changes

Serviceman/servicewoman - Someone who has served in the armed forces (army, navy, airforce)

Shrapnel - Fragments of metal thrown out when a bomb explodes

Trauma - A serious injury, to someone's body or mind

Vocational - Something to do with work or training

Vow - A promise

Workhouse - A place where poor people had to go and live to get help from the authorities