Note: We’re Making Updates
The Indiana Disability History Project website is currently undergoing updates. Due to unforeseen hosting policy changes, the site is temporarily offline.
In the meantime, you can still explore our video collection through the active online exhibit hosted by Indiana University’s Media Collections Online:
Indiana Disability History Video Collection
Additionally, archived versions of our website are available via the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine:
Visit the Archived Site
We appreciate your patience and invite you to check back soon as we work collaboratively to restore and improve access to this important history.
Please be patient—this page may take a moment to load
The Indiana Disability History website, curated by the Indiana Institute on Disability and Community, documents and preserves the memories and experiences of Hoosiers with disabilities, highlighting historic developments in the disability rights movement.
The website uses video, audio, and digital technology to raise awareness of the contributions of movement leaders and pioneers as well as people trying to live ordinary lives. These advocates include both Hoosiers with disabilities and their supporters. They are community activists, family members, educators, professional service providers, public officials, and legislators.
The website offers online exhibits featuring a collection of oral history interviews in video format, with accompanying transcripts, descriptive data, and historical background information. This first-hand testimony illuminates the role of advocacy, and resulting changes in public policy, in the evolution of service provision and cultural attitudes towards people with disabilities.
Indiana Disability History Website