| Our story begins in 1812 in Paris, when 
            an accident in his father's leather shop caused 3-year-old Louis to 
            go blind. Louis' injury was originally thought to be not very 
            serious, but then the injured eye became infected and the infection 
            spread to his other eye. Before long, Louis was blind. At age 10, Louis went to a school 
            for the blind in Paris. He was not satisfied with the books that the 
            school had for the blind students, though. They consisted of raised 
            lettering, but they literally spelled out every letter.  If a sighted person had to read one 
            letter at a time with his eyes, it would take a long time to read 
            anything, so you can imagine how long it would take a blind person 
            to "read" one letter at a time with his fingers. Louis knew there 
            must be a way to improve upon this alphabet.  This one's no great mystery -- the 
            hero of the story is Louis Braille, the inventor of the Braille 
            alphabet. What you might not know, however, is the story of how he 
            developed the Braille alphabet.  
             There were at least 20 types of 
            embossed alphabets available at the time, in the early 1800s. The 
            problem was that they were all developed by people with normal 
            vision but used by the blind. As a result, they were ineffective.
             Louis' first inspiration was 
            probably his school's library books -- or actually the lack of 
            library books -- for the blind. After reading all 14 of them, he 
            knew there must be a way to increase the number of books written for 
            the blind. In 1819, a French army officer named 
            Charles Barbier created the forerunner of the Braille alphabet. He 
            used his 12-dot system of raised lettering, called "night writing," 
            to send messages to his soldiers at night.  Barbier's night writing system of 
            raised dots and dashes was similar to Morse code, although Morse 
            wouldn't be invented for another 25 years. Soldiers used this 
            alphabet so they could understand messages without having to light a 
            match, since a lit match would reveal their location to the enemy.
             
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       Louis set out to improve upon 
            Barbier's system, and by 1824 the 15-year-old had created the 
            six-dot system of raised lettering that is used today. It was an 
            immediate hit with the other students at his school, even though it 
            was initially rejected by the school's teachers. Louis Braille later 
            became a teacher at this school -- the same school for the blind 
            that he attended.  When he died in 1852, it looked like 
            the Braille alphabet would die with him, but a group of four blind 
            men who founded the Royal National Institute of the Blind kept his 
            alphabet alive. The institute is now the largest publisher of 
            Braille in Europe.  How did Louis Braille "print" the 
            dots in the alphabet of raised lettering that bears his name? 
             The injury that caused Louis to go 
            blind at age 3 occurred when he slipped in his father's leather shop 
            and was poked in the eye by an awl. An awl is a tool with a very 
            sharp point at the end of it, and it is used to punch holes in 
            leather. When he developed his Braille alphabet, he used an awl to 
            poke the paper from underneath in order to create dots above the 
            paper.  Louis Braille used the object that 
            caused him to go blind to create a whole new alphabet, enabling 
            other blind people to read.  
            [Paul Niemann] 
            Paul Niemann is the author of Invention Mysteries. He can be 
            reached at niemann7@aol.com.  © Copyright Paul Niemann 2005 
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