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    • 1927

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      timeline.com

      • During this time, groups like the German Red Cross Ambulance Dogs Association were some of the first to start training dogs for blinded veterans. After the war, in 1927, American German Shepherd breeders and Switzerland residents George and Dorothy Eustis visited a service dog training school in Postdam, Germany.
      ibvi.org/blog/where-seeing-eye-dogs-originated/
  1. The German Red Cross Ambulance Dogs Association established a training centre in Oldenberg. The first guide dog was issued in 1916 to a blinded veteran, Paul Feyen. Within a year there were 100 guide dogs issued and 539 guide dogs had been issued by 1919.

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  2. On November 5, 1927, The Saturday Evening Post published an article by Eustis about a school outside Berlin that trained German war veterans who had been blinded by mustard gas in World War I. Soon the publishing company was forwarding her piles of letters from readers who wanted to know more.

  3. In 1928, he went to Switzlerland to meet the dog Dorthy helped train—a female German Shepherd guide dog he later named Buddy. Morris and Buddy returned to the United States to demonstrate what a guide dog could provide for the visually impaired and blind.

  4. Apr 14, 2016 · In 1927, this article about dogs being trained in Germany to help blind veterans of World War I led to a new independence for thousands of visually impaired Americans.

  5. There, trainer Lambert Kreimer used German shepherds to guide World War I veterans blinded by mustard gas. The resulting article was published on November 5, 1927. The program–and the information shared by Dorothy–she shared was to change the lives of blind people everywhere:

  6. Feb 19, 2021 · Eustis was training German Shepherds in Switzerland and was so impressed by the center that she wrote an article about its method of training dogs and its success. The article was published in an American newspaper, The Saturday Evening Post. In 1927, a blind American man named Morris Frank heard about the article.

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  8. Guide Dogs for the Blind was incorporated on May 27, 1942, and Lois and Don began training dogs and instructing students from a rented home in Los Gatos, California (south of San Jose). A German Shepherd named Blondie, who had been rescued from a Pasadena dog shelter, was one of the first dogs trained.

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