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1690 |
Martha's Vineyard,
Massachusetts settled by 200 immigrants from Kent County, England. By
mid-1700s, the birthrate for deaf children was 1 in 25. Almost all
inhabitants signed and public meetings were conducted in sign language.
Children from the island attended the American School for the Deaf (est.
1817) and helped to influence French Sign Language to evolve into
American Sign Language. |
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1755 |
The "father of the deaf," Charles
Michel de l'Eppe, (1715-1790) establishes the first free school for the
deaf in the world, the National Institute of Deaf Mutes, in Paris,
France. |
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1760 |
Thomas Braidwood opens the
first oral school for the Deaf in England |
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1785 |
Laurent Clerc is born. This
Deaf French teacher taught Thomas Gallaudet to sign and helped to
establish the first Deaf school in America. |
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1787 |
Thomas Gallaudet is born.
Founder (along with Laurent Clerc) of the American School for the
Deaf. |
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1805 |
Alice Cogswell is born. A
chance encounter with Alice led Thomas Gallaudet led Alice's father,
Mason Cogswell, to send Gallaudet to investigate methods of teaching
Deaf children in Europe and to subsequently establish the American
School for the Deaf. |
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1814 |
Thomas Gallaudet first
encounters Alice Cogswell |
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1817 |
Connecticut Asylum for the Instruction of
Deaf and Dumb Persons (later renamed the American School for the Deaf),
the first permanent school for Deaf people in America, opens in Hartford
on April 15. The first teachers are Thomas Gallaudet and Laurent Clerc. |
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1823 |
Kentucky School for the Deaf opens, the
first state supported school. |
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1837 |
St. Joseph's School for the
Deaf, the first Catholic deaf school in the U.S., opens in St. Louis,
Missouri |
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1839 |
Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind
becomes the first school to serve both deaf children and blind children. |
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1846 |
American Annals of the Deaf
begins publication at the American School in Hartford. |
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1864 |
Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb
(later renamed Gallaudet College) is established. Charter signed by
Abraham Lincoln, its first patron. Edward Miner Gallaudet, son of Thomas
and Sophia Fowler-Gallaudet, named the insitution's first president. |
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1867 |
The first purely oral school in the U.S.,
The New York Institution for the Improved Instruction of Deaf Mutes,
(later renamed the Lexington School for the Deaf) opens on March 1 in
New York City. |
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Clarke School for the Deaf,
Northampton, Massachusetts, opens. |
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Horace Mann, the first
permanent day school in the U.S. is established. |
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1872 |
Alexander Graham Bell opens speech school
for teachers of the deaf in Boston. |
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1876 |
A.G. Bell patents the telephone invention. |
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1878 |
EZ Westervelt introduces the
Rochester Method at the New York School. |
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First International Congress on
Education of the Deaf meets in Paris. |
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1880 |
The National Association of the Deaf
organizes in Cincinnati, OH. |
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International Congress on Education of the
Deaf meets in Milan, Italy and adopts infamous resolution banning the
use of sign language in teaching deaf children. |
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Helen Keller is born in
Tuscambia, Alabama. Lost both her hearing and sight at age 19 months. |
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1883 |
A.G. Bell publishes "Memoir Upon the
Formation of a Deaf Variety of the Human Race." Advocates
prohibiting deaf persons from marrying and forced sterilization to
prevent the spread of deafness. |
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1887 |
Women first admitted to the
Columbia Institution (later Gallaudet College). |
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AG Bell establishes the Volta
Bureau. |
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1889 |
On June 19, William Ellsworth
"Dummy" Hoy throws out three Indianapolis base runners at home
plate from the outfield—the first of only three outfielders in history
to do so. |
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1890 |
A.G. Bell founds and endows the American
Association to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf (later renamed
the Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf). |
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1894 |
The Columbia Institution for
Deaf and Dumb Persons renamed Gallaudet College in honor of Thomas
Hopkins Gallaudet. |
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1901 |
William "Dummy" Hoy hits the first
grand-slam home run in the newly-formed American League. |
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The National Fraternal Society of the Deaf (NSFD)
is formed. Known as the "Frat," this organization provides insurance,
burial benefits, life insurance and advocated for equal treatment for
Deaf drivers. |
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1902 |
Helen Keller earns a BA degree cum laude at
Radcliffe College. |
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1913 |
National Association of the Deaf raises
funds for a film project to preserve ASL. Produced films featuring
George Veditz, John Hotchkiss, Robert McGregor, and Edward Miner
Gallaudet. |
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1915 |
Juliette "Daisy" Low, a Deaf
woman who helped to found the Girl Scouts, is named the organization's
first president. |
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1921 |
Earl C. Hansen patents the first
vacuum-tube hearing aid. |
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1931 |
Convention of Executives of
American Schools for the Deaf establishes teacher certification for
teachers of the Deaf. |
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1937 |
Ernest Marshall produces a
motion picture in Sign Language for Deaf audiences. |
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1942 |
John Tracy Clinic opens in Los Angeles. |
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1950 |
First transistor hearing aid is marketed. |
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1951 |
The World Federation of the
Deaf (WFD) is established in Rome. |
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1957 |
American Council of Learned Societies
awards research grant to William Stokoe to begin his research into
American Sign Language. |
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1958 |
President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs PL
85-905, establishing Captioned Films for the Deaf. |
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1960 |
William Stokoe publishes the first
linguistic study of ASL: Sign Language Structure: An Outline of the
Visual Communication Systems of the American Deaf. |
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1962 |
The National Leadership Training Program (NLTP)
established at San Fernando Valley College (renamed California State
University, Northridge in 1972). |
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1964 |
Workshop on Interpreting for the Deaf meets
at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana, June 14-17. Registry of
Interpreters for the Deaf is born. |
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Robert H. Weitbrecht invents a coupling
device (TTY) permitting Deaf people to use teletypewriters to send
messages over telephone lines. |
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California State University, Northridge
begins program for Deaf students. |
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1965 |
Bernard Bragg, a Deaf actor,
stars in the television program, The Silent Man. |
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The Babbidge Report presented
to U.S.Congress investigates oral deaf education, finding it a
"dismal failure" and recommends alternative methods of
instruction. |
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PL 89-333, the Vocational Rehabilitation
Act Amendment is passed; authorizes affiliate state rehabilitation
agencies to employ interpreters for Deaf clients. |
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William Stokoe, Dorothy Casterline, and
Carl Cronenberg publish A Dictionary of American Sign Language. |
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1966 |
The Model Secondary School for
the Deaf (MSSD) is established on the campus of Gallaudet University. |
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1967 |
The National Theater of the
Deaf is founded by David Hays at the Eugene O'Neill Memorial Theatre in
Waterford, Connecticut. |
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1968 |
National Technical Institute for the Deaf
opens on the campus of the Rochester Institute of Technology in
Rochester, New York. |
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1970 |
Laboratory for Language and Cognitive
Studies established at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San
Diego. Ursula Bellugi is director and begins research on ASL |
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First graduate course on the structure of
ASL taught at Gallaudet College by William Stokoe. |
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1971 |
LRL (Linguistics Research Labratory) is
founded at Gallaudet College, directed by William Stokoe. |
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First presentation on ASL at Linguistic
Society of America conference given by James Woodward. |
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1972 |
First text on teaching ASL (Ameslan)
is published by Lou Fant, Jr. |
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American universities begin to accept ASL
to satisfy language requirements for Ph.D. programs. Among the first are
American University, New York University, and the University of
Minnesota. |
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RID begins national certification of sign
language interpreters. |
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William Stokoe begins
publishing the journal Sign Language Studies. |
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1973 |
Congress passes the Rehabilitation Act of
1973. Section 504 mandates the provision of interpreters for Deaf people
in educational and occupational situations. |
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1974 |
The National Association of the
Deaf conducts a census of Deaf Americans; counts 13.4 million
"hearing impaired" and 1.8 million culturally Deaf Americans. |
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1975 |
Congress passes PL 94-142, "The
Education of All Handicapped Children Act." |
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1976 |
Dr. Frank Hochman graduates with his M.D.
from Rutgers Medical School, becoming the " ... first born-deaf
American to complete medical training, earn a degree, and become a
physician." |
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1977 |
Congress passes the Bilingual, Hearing and
Speech Impaired Court Interpreter Act; mandates appointment and subsidy
of interpreters for Deaf persons in any criminal or civil action
initiated by the federal government. |
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1978 |
First undergraduate course in ASL structure
offered at Gallaudet University. ASL Linguistics Department established. |
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1979 |
National Captioning Institute forms to
prepare captioned programs for television. |
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Gallaudet undergraduate faculty
officially recognizes ASL as a viable means of communicaton which may be
used in classes. |
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The movie Voices debuts. Featuring a
hearing actor in the role of a Deaf character, the movie sparked
protests and a boycott by Deaf people across the country. The film was
eventually withdrawn. |
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1980 |
ABCs of ASL is
published; first sign language text by Deaf authors (Padden, Humphries,
and O'Rourke). |
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1984 |
FDA first approves Choclear
implants in persons 18 years of age and older. |
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1986 |
Marlee Matlin, a Deaf actress,
wins the Academy Award for best actress for her role in Children of a
Lesser God. Matlin generated great controversy in the Deaf community
by speaking, rather than signing, her acceptance speech. |
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1988 |
Students march on Gallaudet University,
demanding the appointment of a deaf president. I. King Jordan, a Deaf
man, subsequently named the university's first Deaf president in it's
124-year history. |
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"Toward Equality:
Education of the Deaf" published by U.S. Congress; calls for ASL to
be used as the "primary medium of language instruction" for
Deaf students. |
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1990 |
The Americans with Disabilities Act signed
into law by President George Bush. |
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Deaf Way takes place in
Washington, D.C. International conference attracts more than 5,000 Deaf
people from nearly 70 countries. |
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1993 |
ADA law mandates
closed-captioning decoder chips in all televisions over 13"
manufactured in or imported into the United States. |
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2003 |
Videophone technology becomes widely
available, granting Deaf people greater comfort and autonomy in
telephone communications. |
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2006 |
Students once again march on Gallaudet
University, demanding the Board of Trustees rescind its appointment of
Dr. Jane Fernandez as I. King Jordan's successor as president. The
GUFSSA (Gallaudet
University Faculty, Students, Staff, and Alumni) galvanized Deaf
students across the U.S. and ultimately prevailed in their efforts to
have a voice in the naming of Jordan's successor. |