In addition to the system devised by Louis Braille, a number of other methods for blind people to read and/or write on paper have been used. One of the most popular was the English system of
Dr. William Moon invented in 1845. The English/Moon system or
Moon type is easy to learn for the newly blind as it has a strong resemblance to the familiar written alphabet, but Braille has such great advantages over the Moon system for regular usage that the Moon system never became as popular. Braille with its
slate and stylus was unique in that it was the first and, until computers with
screen readers, the only method a blind person could write and read themselves what had been written. The earliest systematic attempt to provide a method to "teach the blind to read and to write, and give them books printed by themselves" was by
Valentin Haüy who used a system of
embossed roman characters. In June 1784, Haüy sought his first pupil at the
church of Saint-Germain-des-Prés. On 5 December 1786, Haüy's pupils had embossed from movable letterpress type his "Essai sur l'éducation des aveugles" (Essay on the Education of Blind Children), the first book ever published for the blind. Prior to 1786, tools for the blind to read or write were the results of individuals' personal solutions. One notable approach was that of
Nicholas Saunderson (
Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at
Cambridge) blind nearly from birth, who devised an Arithmetical slate. Braille evolved from a method developed by
Charles Barbier. It was successfully used at the Institution Royale des Jeunes Aveugles in Paris for several years, until Braille created his own system, which was more compact and flexible. ==Notes==