The National League of the Blind was the first radical self-represented
group of visually impaired people in Britain, with branches in every
part of the United Kingdom. Founded in 1893, it registered as a trade
union in 1899 and still exists today as part of the trade union
'community'. From the very beginning, the League campaigned vehemently
to make the state solely responsible for providing training, employment
and assistance for the visually impaired as a right. It also fought for
the abolition of all charitable aid for blind people and better wages
and working conditions in workshops, as well as other issues such as
travel or tax concessions. This book is the first critical study on this
unique social movement organisation. It explores the League's
multifaceted character, its campaign for 'direct state aid, ' its
relationship with the trade union movement and the Labour Party, and its
impact on the British welfare state.