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A history of inclusion

From the Old Testament to the Paralympics and beyond: we track the progress of disability rights and accessibility from ancient times to the present day.

An ancient Chinese artwork featuring a man being wheeled in a chair.

525 BCE

Images of wheeled chairs made specifically to carry people start to appear in Chinese art. It’s thought they were designed for members of the nobility, to make them seem important, rather than to help people with disabilities.

500 BCE

The Old Testament contains one of the earliest examples of disability awareness: ‘Thou shalt not curse the deaf, nor put a stumbling block before the blind, nor maketh the blind to wander out of the path.’ (Leviticus 19:14)

An open Bible.
An example of one of the first pairs of spectacles, with two magnifying glasses riveted together.
An example of one of the first pairs of spectacles, with two magnifying glasses riveted together.

1300s

Spectacles were invented in northern Italy, although no one is sure who made the first pairs. The early frames consisted of magnifying glassed riveted together by the handles so they could sit on the nose. The earliest surviving examples, dated to the 15th century, were found under the floorboards of a German convent in 1953.

1550s

French battlefield surgeon Ambroise Paré invented artificial limbs including a mechanical hand operated by catches and springs. He started as a ‘barber surgeon’, in the days when barbers also removed teeth and amputated limbs. (The striped barbershop pole represents the bloody napkins used during bloodletting.)

A diagram of Ambroise Pare's mechanical hand.
A historical illustration of King Phillip in his wheeled chair.

1595

The first wheelchair designed for disability was built for King Philip II of Spain. The ‘invalid’s chair’ had small wheels attached to the end of its legs, and a platform for the king’s feet. It couldn’t be self-propelled – it’s likely the king always had servants transporting him around.

A close-up of text in braille.
A close-up of text in braille.

1824

A 15-year-old Louis Braille developed a tactile system of raised dots to help blind people read, write and communicate. He spent several years refining his system, although his original versions didn’t include the letter W, which was not part of the French alphabet at the time (it was added later in the 19th century).

1880

Helen Keller was born in Alabama in the US: at 19 months old she caught an illness – possibly meningitis – that caused her to lose her sight and hearing. Her teacher, Anne Sullivan, who was also blind, devised a system for communicating with her by spelling out words in her palm. Helen later became the first deafblind person to earn a degree.

Helen Keller in her graduation gown.
Frida Kahlo's studio, showing her painting tools and the mirror she used to paint self-portraits.
Frida Kahlo's studio, showing her painting tools and the mirror she used to paint self-portraits.

1925

Frida Kahlo di Rivera was injured in a bus accident in Mexico City at the age of 18. Several people were killed, and Kahlo suffered a broken spine, collarbone, pelvis and ribs, forcing her to remain in bed for several months. Bored, she started to paint. A special easel enabled her to paint lying down, with a mirror above her bed so she could create self-portraits.

1946

After noticing the number of men injured in the war, Bert Greeves started building single-seater cars for people with physical impairments. With three wheels, blue paintwork and handlebars instead of a steering wheel, the Invacar (aka ‘invalid carriage’) was a common sight on UK roads in the 1960s and 70s. In 2003 they were recalled and scrapped as they did not meet new safety standards.

An Invacar three-wheeled car for people with disabilities.
The archery competitors from the Stoke Mandeville Games line up on the field in front of their archery targets.

1948

A group of war veterans with spinal injuries competed in an archery contest at the Stoke Mandeville Games, marking the birth of the Paralympics movement. Previously, athletes with disabilities had competed at the Olympics: in 1904, US gymnast George Eyser, who had an artificial leg, won three gold medals in a single day.

A road sign featuring the Transport font, with the words 'Bury St Edmunds (A14), Gt Barton (A143) and Thurston' plus a roundabout symbol.
A road sign featuring the Transport font, with the words 'Bury St Edmunds (A14), Gt Barton (A143) and Thurston' plus a roundabout symbol.

1963

Margaret Calvert and Jock Kinnear launched their Transport typeface for road signs in the UK. The sans-serif design was created to be as easy to read as possible: the curved strokes of many of the letters, such as the curl on the lower-case L and T, ensured the words could be recognised from a distance when travelling at speed. The typeface is still used on all UK road signs today.

1970

The UK’s Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act was introduced to give legal rights to people with disabilities. Public buildings were required to provide parking and toilets for people with disabilities, and blue badge permits for cars were introduced to allow disabled drivers to park in places where other drivers can’t, such as on double yellow lines.

A parking sign with the words 'Disabled badge holders only'.
Actor Roger Tonge on set at Crossroads, sitting in a wheelchair.

1972

British TV soap Crossroads was the first to feature a character with a disability. Roger Tonge, who played Sandy, had been diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma, which affected his mobility – he could only appear sitting or lying. Rather than writing him out, a plotline was developed where Sandy was paralysed in an accident and started using a wheelchair.

A record.
A record.

1981

The UN launched the ‘International Year for Disabled People’, although people with disabilities didn’t play a part in most of its events. Singer Ian Dury, who had a disability caused by childhood polio, released a song titled ‘Spasticus Autisticus’ as a scathing critique of the event. The song was banned by the BBC, but was later performed by Orbital at the opening of the 2012 Paralympics.
The ITV Telethon logo.

1992

Up to 1,500 disabled people protested against ITV’s 24-hour Telethon fundraiser, which they said showed a ‘pitiful’ portrayal of people with disabilities. They chained themselves to buses and blocked traffic with their wheelchairs. “The police arrested us, then let us go as they didn’t have accessible vehicles to take us away,” said one protester.

2003

British Sign Language (BSL) was officially recognised by the UK government as a full, independent language. It is very different to its US counterpart, American Sign Language (ASL) – the two are mutually unintelligible, even though both countries share the same spoken language.

A close-up of hands doing sign language.
The UN logo.
The UN logo.

2006

The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities was adopted to promote equality and protect the human rights of people with disabilities. It came into force in May 2008, helping to change the perception of people with disabilities from recipients of pity to equal members of society. As of April 2018, 177 countries have ratified the Convention, with the notable exception of the USA.
A screengrab from the GOV.UK website homepage.

2013

The GOV.UK website won the Design Museum’s Design of the Year award for its “well thought out yet understated design”. It aimed to set new accessibility benchmarks with a simple layout that could be used by everyone. The Daily Mail missed the point entirely: it made fun of the site with the headline: “And the award goes to boring.com.”

Learn why accessible design is so important to us

Perspectives

Braille in the spotlight

More than 200 years after it was invented, Louis Braille’s tactile code is holding its own against modern technology, and is inspiring designers and artists to get creative.

Hector Minto.

How Microsoft is championing inclusive technology

Microsoft’s Hector Minto shares groundbreaking accessibility features that aren’t just aimed at people with disabilities.

A close up of two women holding hands.

How we make our work inclusive

Ensuring your work can be understood by everyone should be an essential part of all your communications. Here’s a rundown of how to do it.