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About The Princeton Braillists Collection

close up photo of hands creating a master for tactile map

Tactile Maps List       Biology Tactiles


The Princeton Braillists Collection and Legacy

The Collection: Four colossal bookcases. Seven thermoform machines, five binding machines, and two light projectors. Twenty boxes bursting with aluminum tactile graphics ranging from fungi to fish, electricity to elements, geomorphology to geometry, mitosis to moon phases. And the pièce de résistance: 40 volumes amounting to 2,177 pages of the most comprehensive maps available in a tactile format.

The Legacy: Four decades of thoughtful devotion have been poured into the compendium that is The Princeton Braillists' collection. Beginning in 1965, armed with a background in Experimental Physics and a penchant for handicrafts, Nancy Amick created tactile images to accompany audio texts for Recording for the Blind in Princeton. Drawing on her childhood experience with copper embossing, Nancy generated textures, patterns and lines in sheets of flexible aluminum, designing hundreds of diagrams for math and science textbooks, and simultaneously developing novel techniques to become an expert in the field of tactile graphics.

In 1980, after Recording for the Blind shifted its company focus, Nancy and Ruth Bogia, a certified braille transcriber, resurrected a dormant non-profit: The Princeton Braillists. Their first tactile volume, "Basic Human Anatomy," was released in 1988, and eight years later they advertised their first set of tactile maps: "Maps of North and South America". The all-volunteer operation expanded to include Fran Gasman, a transcriber for the New Jersey Commission, Phyllis Branin, who assisted in assembly, and Nancy's family, including her husband Jim and daughter D'Maris. By 2016, The Princeton Braillists had created 35 books covering Europe, Asia, Africa, North and South America, as well as 18 U.S. states, along the way receiving wide acclaim and awards for their tactile contributions to the blind community.

Nancy passed in the fall of 2016, and her family continued to fill orders while searching for a new home for the entire collection. Jim and D'Maris toured NBP in February 2017. By May, three National Braille Press team members were in a 15-foot truck bound for Princeton, NJ, charged with the careful transfer of Nancy's work.

The Legacy Continues: National Braille Press was honored to accept the generous gift of The Princeton Braillists' celebrated tactiles, and has embraced the opportunity to continue Nancy's legacy. Our hope is to maintain and reproduce the current catalogue while investigating ways to update geographical information, recode for Unified English Braille, and create new volumes of additional countries and states. We also aim to showcase the extensive collection of math and science diagrams from Nancy's early years, sharing the delightful breadth of her images from beginning to end.

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