Emerson Foulkes Dies
Emerson Foulkes Dies
Emerson Foulke, 1929 to
1997
Emerson Foulke Dies
by Marc Maurer
On Monday, December 29, 1997, Dr. Emerson
Foulke, a long-time member and leader in the National Federation of the Blind,
died of cancer at his home in Louisville, Kentucky. Dr. Foulke was well known
in the field of research regarding blindness and Braille. He established the
Research Laboratory at the University of Louisville, where he served as a professor
of psychology for a quarter of a century. For over a year in 1995 and 1996
he was the director of the International Braille Research Center, an international
research organization focusing on Braille and communications for the blind.
Dr. Foulke was a leader of the National
Federation of the Blind of Kentucky. He was instrumental in the establishment
of the Research and Development Committee of the National Federation of the
Blind, and he was one of the principal researchers designing innovative products
for the Federation. In 1993 he was granted the Distinguished Blind Educator
of the Year Award by the National Federation of the Blind. He was widely published
in the field of Braille and tactile communications. He worked extensively to
enhance understanding of Braille codes and to ensure their ease of use. He
is one of the best-known authors dealing with research into the use and importance
of Braille.
These are facts about the life and contribution
of Emerson Foulke, but they do not demonstrate the character of the man. He
was enormously curious about the way things are done and how people think.
He was warm and generous and always prepared to offer a joke or a story. He
could be serious and analytical, but he felt that the leavening of an amusing
anecdote or a shaggy dog story would help to lighten the mood and make the
day go better. He was prepared to give a hand and help a friend, but he was
also prepared to share his knowledge, his experience, and his resources with
someone he had only recently met. Among his enormous curiosities, he conducted
the most extensive research in the nation regarding the way in which blind
people learn through tactile images. His contributions must be measured not
in individual accomplishments but in the framework of the mind and spirit that
he brought to creating a better life for the blind.
My life and the lives of many other Federation
members have been enriched because Dr. Emerson Foulke was our friend. He is
gone, but the spirit of excitement, of exploration, and of enthusiasm that
was an essential part of him is with us still.
The obituary in the Louisville, Kentucky,
Courier-Journal has this to say about Dr. Emerson Foulke, a Federationist who
will be greatly missed:
Emerson Foulke Dies; Was U of L Professor
Innovator for the Blind
by Katherine L. Sears
Emerson Foulke, a retired psychology
professor at the University of Louisville who established a research center
that developed alternative forms of reading and communication for visually
impaired adults, died of cancer Monday at his Louisville home. He was sixty-eight.
Foulke, who had been blind since he was
two, worked to develop alternatives to Braille because most blind Americans
can't read Braille, he told the Courier-Journal in 1976.
He founded the Perceptual Alternatives
Laboratory in 1968 and served as its director until he retired in 1992.
Foulke developed techniques to compress
information from audio tapes. His equipment could speed up recordings of books
and text and still enable someone to retain pertinent information.
He also worked to increase the number
of ideas that could be expressed in Braille to make it easier for people to
understand complex subjects such as chemistry and math.
Foulke also developed for blind people
a curved cane that wouldn't get caught in sidewalk gratings.
Lela Johns, an assistant of Foulke at
the lab, said the university closed it after he retired. But Foulke continued
to devise improvements to computer codes in math for the National Federation
of the Blind, Johns said.
"He was still very active in the
research for improving the educational techniques and communication for visually
impaired people," Johns said. "He was a very challenging person to
work for. He always wanted to learn more."
Louisville resident Tim Cranmer, who
chairs the International Braille Research Center in Baltimore, said Foulke
was known worldwide for his innovations in electronic communications for blind
and visually impaired people.
"He is probably the most widely
published and widely quoted (person) in the field of Braille research and tactile
communications," said Cranmer, who also is blind. "His loss is absolutely
profound as far as our field is concerned. We do not have a successor for Dr.
Foulke."
Cranmer said Foulke recently received
the Louis Braille Memorial Award, a 3-ounce solid-gold medallion and $10,000,
from the International Braille Research Center, which Foulke helped establish
in 1985.
Last year Foulke spoke to the World Blind
Union meeting in South America. He also earned the Distinguished Teaching Award
from the University of Louisville.
His survivors include his wife, Marilyn
Foulke; sisters Margaret Meyer and Patricia Rountree; and a brother, Eldridge
Foulke.
He willed his body to the University
of Louisville School of Medicine. A memorial service will be held at 2 p.m.
January 10 at First Unitarian Church, 809 South Fourth Street.
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