The First Seeing Eye Dog in America

Have you ever wondered why a blind person's guide dog is called a seeing eye dog instead of just a guide dog? That's because they came came from the organization The Seeing Eye, founded in 1929 by Morris Frank. Frank lost his sight in one eye at age six, and the other at 16. He heard about an innovative program in Germany that trained dogs to guide blind people. Frank ended up going to Switzerland to work with dog trainer Dorothy Harrison Eustis and came back with a female German shepherd he named Buddy.

The real innovation in training Buddy and other guide dogs was "intelligent disobedience." Buddy was trained to disregard her owner's commands when the situation called for it, such as in dangerous traffic. In 1928 Frank gave a demonstration in New York City to show reporters how Buddy could guide him safely in walking through Manhattan. The next year, Frank and Eustis opened the dog training program that's still in operation today. -via Nag on the Lake


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