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Page 1: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009

To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: [email protected]

To use this PowerPoint presentation in its entirety, please give credit to the author.

Page 2: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

By: Lindsey Brown

Page 3: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet born in Philadelphia on December. 10,

1787. Thomas was a good student and impressed

people with his intellect. attended Yale University at the age of fourth

teen and graduated first among his class. In 1812, he attended Andover Theological

Seminary and graduated in 1814.

Page 4: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

Alice Cogswell, the deaf daughter of his neighbors, Dr. Mason Cogswell and his wife Mary

He taught her words by writing them with a stick in the dirt.

Gallaudet realized that there was no where to educate Alice, but that she was cognitively intact.

He traveled to Europe to study methods for teaching deaf students

Page 5: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

Thomas wanted to gain knowledge from the Braidwood family in Edinburgh, Scotland.

The Braidwoods’ were not interested in sharing their information about teaching the deaf.

He was also not satisfied that the oral method produced desirable results.

Page 6: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

While in Great Britain he met, Laurent Clerc

Gallaudet followed to Paris to study the school's method of teaching the deaf using manual communication. He loved it!

After learning, he persuaded Laurent Clerc to return with him to the United States.

Page 7: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

The two men toured New England and successfully raised private and public funds to found a school for deaf students in Hartford, which later became known as the American School for the Deaf.

Young Alice was one of the first seven students in the United States.

Page 8: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

•The Child’s Book on Repentance. Boston: The American Tract Society, 1832. •The Child’s Book of the Soul. Boston: The American Tract Society, 1836. •The Child’s Book of the Fall of Man. Boston: The American Tract Society, 1841.

Page 9: Date submitted to deafed.net – July 7, 2009 To contact the author for permission to use this PowerPoint, please e-mail: karen.dilka@eku.edu karen.dilka@eku.edu

http://www.deafis.org/history/who/gallaudet.php Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet. (2009, May 22). In Wikipedia, The

Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 16:40, May 22, 2009, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thomas_Hopkins_Gallaudet&oldid=291642715

Reagan, Timothy. “Gallaudet, Thomas Hopkins.” Feb. 2000. American National Biography. 16 Nov. 2006. <http://www.anb.org/articles/09/09-00287.html>.

Booth, Edwin. “Booth's reminiscences of Gallaudet,” American Annals of the Deaf, Volume 26, Number 3, July 1881, pages 200-202, http://library.gallaudet.edu/pdf/BoothsThomasR.pdf

"Tribute to Gallaudet--A Discourse in Commemoration of the Life, Character and Services, of the Rev. Thomas H. Gallaudet, LL.D.--Delivered Before the Citizens of Hartford, Jan. 7th, 1852. With an Appendix, Containing History of Deaf-Mute Instruction and Institutions, and other Documents." By Henry Barnard, 1852. (Download book: http://www.saveourdeafschools.org/tribute_to_gallaudet.pdf)