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  2. The Yorkshire School for the Blind was founded in 1833 by The Wilberforce Memorial, and was also known as The Wilberforce School for the Blind. The school was situated at the King's Manor in the city centre, which had formerly been the home of the abbot of St. Mary's Abbey.

  3. The Wilberforce Trust traces its roots back to 1833 when the Yorkshire School for the Blind was opened in memory of William Wilberforce, who had died that year.

  4. Oct 30, 2014 · The Yorkshire School for the Blind was founded in 1833 in memory of William Wilberforce, the great abolitionist and Yorkshire MP.

  5. The Yorkshire School for the Blind, founded at York in 1833, provided 'maintenance, and ordinary, musical, and industrial instruction for blind children of both sexes.' Other establishments of the period included the London Society for Teaching the Blind to Read (1838), Henshaw's Blind Asylum at Manchester (1838), the Blind Asylum at Brighton ...

  6. Dates of Creation. 1888-1968. Name of Creator. Yorkshire School for the Blind; 1833-1968. Physical Description. 6 items Archives - Non-digital. Scope and Content. The collection currently comprises five volumes of annual reports and one volume reporting the centenary of the school. Access Information. Open.

  7. Sep 16, 2024 · Yorkshire School for the Blind. This page summarises records created by this Organisation. The summary includes a brief description of the collection (s) (usually including the covering...

  8. Wilberforce School for the Blind. The Wilberforce Memorial, the charity behind the Yorkshire School for the Blind, was set up in response to the death of William Wilberforce in 1833 out of a desire to honour his memory and good works in a fitting manner.