Morris Frank
Morris Frank (March 23, 1908 – November 22, 1980) was a
co-founder of The Seeing Eye, the first Guide-Dog School in the United States.
He traveled the United States and Canada to promote the use of guide dogs for
people who are blind or visually impaired, as well as the right of people with
guide dogs to access restaurants, hotels, transportation, and other places that
are open to the general public.
Early life Frank was born in Nashville, Tennessee, as the third and
youngest son of wealthy Jewish parents, John Frank and Jessie Hirsch Frank.
Throughout his childhood, Frank had been the guide and helper for his mother,
who was blind. At age six, he went blind in his right eye after hitting an
overhanging tree branch while horseback riding; at age sixteen, he went blind
in the other eye while boxing with a friend. (In a bizarre coincidence, his
mother's blindness was also caused by two unrelated accidents: she went blind
in one eye when delivering her first son, and in the other fifteen years later
when she was thrown from a horse.) Before Frank reached his teens, he went to
summer camp at Camp Winnebago in Fayette, Maine, where he later returned for a
visit, and brought Buddy with him. Frank graduated from Montgomery Bell
Academy, then attended Vanderbilt University while working as an insurance
salesman. He hired young men to serve as guides, but found them to be
unreliable.
Guide Dogs On November 5, 1927, The Saturday Evening Post published an
article by Dorothy Harrison Eustis, an American dog trainer living in
Switzerland. The article, titled "The Seeing Eye", was Eustis's
first-hand account about a school in Germany where blinded World War I veterans
were being trained to work with guide dogs. Frank was one of many people who
wrote to her asking where he could get such a dog Frank not only asked
for information about the school in Germany, but also about trainers in the
U.S., and said he "would like to forward this work in this country".
On February 9, 1928, Eustis called Frank and asked him if he would come to
her dog-training school in Switzerland, called Fortunate Fields, to be paired
with a guide dog. Frank replied, "Mrs. Eustis, to get my independence
back, I'd go to hell."
Buddy At Fortunate Fields, Frank was partnered with a female German Shepherd
named Kiss – whom he promptly renamed Buddy. He was trained in how to work with
Buddy by Elliot "Jack" Humphrey, a self-taught animal trainer and dog
breeder who worked for Eustis, at Fortunate Fields and on the streets of nearby
Vevey. Frank and Buddy returned to New York City on June 11, 1928, and
immediately began telling reporters about how he could now travel independently
with his guide dog. Frank demonstrated Buddy's abilities to the media by
crossing West Street, a particularly dangerous waterfront street, and later on
Broadway during the evening rush. His one-word telegram to Eustis summed up his
experience: "Success". Frank worked with Buddy until her death
on May 23, 1938; he named her replacement Buddy, as he would all his subsequent
guide dogs.
The Seeing Eye Frank and Eustis then set about creating a guide-dog training
school in the United States, and on January 29, 1929, The Seeing Eye was
incorporated in Nashville, becoming the first guide-dog school in the United
States. Two years later, the school moved to Whippany, New Jersey, and in 1965
to its current location in Morristown, New Jersey.
Between 1928 and 1956, Frank, as The Seeing Eye's vice
president, traveled throughout the United States and Canada, spreading the word
about The Seeing Eye and the need for equal access laws for people with guide
dogs. He met with U.S. President Herbert Hoover in 1930 and with U.S. President
Harry Truman in 1949. Between 1954 and 1956 alone, Frank met with 300
ophthalmologists and met with Seeing Eye graduates in all 48 states and
throughout Canada.
Frank constantly championed for the right to be accompanied
by his guide dog. In 1928, Frank was routinely told that Buddy could not ride
in the passenger compartment with him; by 1935, all railroads in the United
States had adopted policies specifically allowing guide dogs to remain with
their owners on trains, and by 1939, The Seeing Eye informed the American Hotel
Association that the number of hotels that banned guide dogs from the premises
was small and "growing smaller constantly". By 1956, every state in
the country had passed laws guaranteeing blind people with guide dogs access to
public spaces. Frank retired from The Seeing Eye in 1956, at age 48, to found
his own insurance agency in Morristown. He died on November 22, 1980, at his
home in the Brookside section of Mendham Township, New Jersey.
Honors and Awards On April 29, 2005, a sculpture titled The Way to Independence
was unveiled on Morristown Green in Morristown. The sculpture of Frank and
Buddy, created by John Seward Johnson II, is made of bronze and painted in full
color. It captures the pair in mid-stride, with Frank motioning his hand ahead
as if he is giving Buddy the "forward" command. A plaque near
the original headquarters of The Seeing Eye in Nashville was dedicated in 2008;
it reads, "Independence and Dignity Since 1929. The Seeing Eye, the
world-famous dog guide training school, was incorporated in Nashville January
29, 1929, with headquarters in the Fourth and First National Bank Building at
315 Union St. Morris Frank, a 20-year-old blind man from Nashville, and his
guide dog Buddy, played a key role in the school's founding and subsequent
success. It was Frank who persuaded Dorothy Harrison Eustis to establish a
school in the United States." In 2010, Frank was posthumously inducted
into the Hall of Fame: Leaders and Legends of the Blindness Field.
In Popular Culture Frank, along with co-author Blake Clark, wrote of his time
with Buddy in the book First Lady of the Seeing Eye, published in 1957. Frank's
life story was told in the 1984 Walt Disney television film Love Leads the Way:
A True Story. He was played by Timothy Bottoms. William Mooney wrote and
performed a one-man show about Frank's life, With a Dog's Eyes. Kate
Klimo wrote "Buddy", the second of a series of children's books
called Dog Diaries. Buddy was published in 2013. Writings First Lady of
the Seeing Eye, by Morris Frank and Blake Clark, Henry Holt, 1957.
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