Beginning to lose his sight due to
glaucoma despite a 1908 operation, Pearson was progressively forced from 1910 onwards to relinquish his newspaper interests; the
Daily Express eventually passed, in November 1916, under the control of the Canadian–British tycoon Sir Max Aitken, later
Lord Beaverbrook. Through the
British and Foreign Blind Association, Pearson published his ''Pearson's Easy Dictionary
in Braille form in 1912. Later completely blind, Pearson was made president of the National Institution for the Blind in 1914, raising its income from £8,000 to £360,000 in only eight years. On 29 January 1915, he cofounded The Blinded Soldiers and Sailors Care Committee (later renamed 'St Dunstan's''' and now known as
Blind Veterans UK), for soldiers blinded by
gas attack or trauma during the
First World War. Its goal, radical for the times, was to provide vocational training rather than charity for invalided servicemen, and thus to enable them to carry out independent and productive lives. Pearson's dedication to this work led to his receiving a
baronetcy on 12 July 1916, whereupon he took the title Sir Arthur Pearson, 1st
Baronet of St Dunstan's, London. He received the
GBE in 1917. Pearson was a close friend of the pioneer of the
Scouting movement
Baden-Powell, and supportive of his efforts in setting up the movement and publishing its magazine
The Scout. When Pearson's scheme for publishing in
Braille was faltering due to lack of funds, on 2 May 1914 Baden-Powell publicly requested that "all Scouts perform a 'good turn' for
The Scout magazine publisher Mr C. Arthur Pearson, in order to raise money for his scheme of publishing literature in Braille for the blind." In 1919, Pearson wrote the book ''Victory Over Blindness: How it Was Won by the Men of St Dunstan's''. He founded the
Greater London Fund for the Blind in 1921, funded by the establishment of its annual 'Geranium Day' appeal. ==Death==