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  2. Caroline Yale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caroline_Yale

    Clarke School for the Deaf Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing, Caroline Yale was a cofounder and its director. Caroline Ardelia Yale was born to William Lyman Yale and Ardelia Strong on September 29, 1848, in Charlotte, Vermont, where she lived until the age of ten.

  3. List of schools for the deaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_schools_for_the_deaf

    Lexington School for the Deaf: 1864: East Elmurst: New York: PreK-12: Blue Jays: ESDAA Alaska State School for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing: 1973: Anchorage: Alaska: PreK-12: Otter: American School for the Deaf: 1817: Hartford: Connecticut: K-12: Tigers: ESDAA 1 Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and Blind: 1912: Tucson: Arizona: PreK-12 ...

  4. Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hopkins_Gallaudet

    Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet (December 10, 1787 – September 10, 1851 [1]) was an American educator.Along with Laurent Clerc and Mason Cogswell, he co-founded the first permanent institution for the education of the deaf in North America, and he became its first principal.

  5. ‘Word of the Lord.’ Local houses of worship for the Deaf ...

    www.aol.com/word-lord-local-houses-worship...

    While attending a clergy training program in the late 1970s at Gallaudet University, a Washington, D.C., school for deaf and hard of hearing students, Marsh met his future wife, who was studying ...

  6. Clarke Schools for Hearing and Speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke_Schools_for_Hearing...

    Clarke Schools for Hearing and Speech (formerly Clarke School for the Deaf) is a national nonprofit organization that specializes in educating children who are deaf or hard of hearing using listening and spoken language through the assistance of hearing technology such as hearing aids and cochlear implants.

  7. American School for the Deaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_School_for_the_Deaf

    The first deaf school in the United States was short-lived: established in 1815 by Col. William Bolling of Goochland, Virginia, in nearby Cobbs, with John Braidwood (tutor of Bolling's two deaf children) as teacher, it closed in the fall of 1816. [3] Gallaudet Memorial by Daniel Chester French (1925) at American School for the Deaf

  8. Roger Demosthenes O'Kelly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Demosthenes_O'Kelly

    Roger Demosthenes O'Kelly (October 25, 1880 – July 11, 1962) was a deaf, mute, partially-blind African-American lawyer. "[O'Kelly] claimed the distinction of being the only Negro deaf lawyer in the United States and the second deaf person to graduate from Yale University in her history of over 250 years."

  9. Schools for the deaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schools_for_the_deaf

    It was the first school for teaching Deaf and Mute people in the United States; however, it closed in 1816. [3] The American School for the Deaf , in West Hartford, Connecticut, was the first school for the deaf established in the United States, in 1817, by Thomas Gallaudet , in collaboration with a deaf teacher, also from France, named Laurent ...