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  1. ^ "Chapman University | A Top Private University in California". www.chapman.edu. Retrieved 2017-09-15.

Ed Roberts contracted polio as a child and was left quadriplegic. As a disabled man, he dealt with discrimination in many different aspects of his life after contracting the illness. In day to day life, people made comments that alluded to the fact that it may have been better if the polio had ended up killing him and he was told by others that they would rather be dead than be like him. His fight for acceptance in schools, however, is what Roberts is most well-known for. In high school, Roberts was stopped from graduating because he could not complete his gym requirement, as he was paralyzed and spent most of his time in an iron lung. His biggest issue when it came to the school systems occurred at UC Berkeley. After struggling to get accepted, the university refused to give Roberts financial aid. He then sued Berkeley for access and integration. Although he won the case, Roberts was housed in the school’s infirmary instead of the dormitories. As others with disabilities started attending the school and living in the infirmary, an activist group called the Rolling Quads was formed. They ended up starting the Disabled Students’ Program, a resource for those with disabilities that was run by people with disabilities. This program led to the first independent living center in America being made, the Berkeley Center for Independent Living. These centers flourished across the United States and are a huge part of why Ed Roberts was so instrumental in the Independent Living Movement.


Ed Roberts became a large part of the IL Movement after he contracted polio as a child and was left quadriplegic[1]. As a disabled man, he dealt with discrimination in many different aspects of his life after contracting the illness. In day to day life, people made comments that alluded to the fact that it may have been better if the polio had ended up killing him and he was told by others that they would rather be dead than be like him[2]. His fight for acceptance in schools, however, is what Roberts is most well-known for. In high school, Roberts was stopped from graduating because he could not complete his gym requirement, as he was paralyzed and spent most of his time in an iron lung[3]. His biggest issue when it came to the school systems occurred at UC Berkeley. After struggling to get accepted, the university refused to give Roberts financial aid. He then sued Berkeley for access and integration. Although he won the case, Roberts was housed in school’s infirmary instead of the dormitories. As others with disabilities started attending the school and living in the infirmary, an activist group called the Rolling Quads was formed. They ended up starting the Disabled Students’ Program, a resource for those with disabilities that was run by people with disabilities[4]. This program led to the first independent living center in America being made, the Berkeley Center for Independent Living[5]. These centers flourished across the United States and are a huge part of why Ed Roberts was so instrumental in the start of the Independent Living Movement.

  1. ^ Richard Scotch, www.jstor.org/stable/3350150.
  2. ^ "Free Wheeling" Documentary, mn.gov/mnddc/ed-roberts/freeWheeling.html
  3. ^ Kim Nielsen, A Disability History of the Unites States
  4. ^ Kim Nielsen, A Disability History of the United States
  5. ^ Richard Scotch, www.jstor.org/stable/3350150