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  1. The Michigan School for the Blind (MSB) was a state-operated school for blind children in Michigan. Its former academic campus is at 715 W. Willow Street in Lansing, Michigan, and is now The Abigail, a senior apartment complex. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2018.

  2. The Michigan School for the Blind represents a dedicated attempt by the State of Michigan to effectively educate the blind population in a segregated educational setting to better accommodate their need for training and instruction.

  3. Michigan School for the Blind - APH Museum. Building a Future: U.S. Residential Schools for Blind and Visually Impaired Students. Previous Next. Table of Contents. Michigan School for the Blind. U.S. Residential Schools. Description: 1879 — Michigan School for the Blind, Lansing (now Michigan School for the Blind, Flint) Date: 1879. Last Item.

  4. The Michigan School for the Blind was originally part of the Michigan Asylum for the Education of the Deaf and Dumb and Blind in Flint. The By provisions of Act 148, Public Acts of 1917, the institution was declared a public school and was free to all children who were admitted by application to the Superintendent of the School for the Blind.

  5. The Michigan School for the Blind was originally part of the Michigan Asylum for the Education of the Deaf and Dumb and Blind in Flint. The By provisions of Act 148, Public Acts of 1917, the institution was declared a public school and was free to all children who were admitted by application to the Superintendent of the School for the Blind.

  6. Home. About MDE-LIO. History. MDE-LIO previously operated as the Michigan School for the Blind (MSB) on a campus in Lansing. After the school closed, the MSB stayed in operation as an outreach program for students who are Blind or Visually Impaired (BVI).

  7. Michigan School for the Blind. Michigan began educating the blind in 1859 at Flint's Michigan Asylum. In 1879 the legislature established the Michigan School for the Blind, which opened here on September 29, 1880, with 35 students. The next year, five students were its first graduates.