Thomas Gallaudet: The American School For The Deaf

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Thomas Gallaudet was a smart young man from Philadelphia, PA who after having graduated from Yale serving completing a law apprenticeship and degree in the master of the arts, went to the Andover Theological Seminary, graduating in 1814. He was then a preacher. Gallaudet became an extremely important figure in the history for Deaf individuals because in 1817 he opened the first school for the Deaf in America known originally as the Connecticut Asylum at Hartford for the Instruction of Deaf and Dumb Persons later became known as The American School for the Deaf. After having traveled to England to study their ways of teaching, an oral way where they forced the Deaf students to read lips to master speech, with the help of Laurent Clerc who taught Gallaudet sign language, opened the school under the bases for teaching sign language and not using the oral method.
2. Where was Laurent Clerc from? What was his occupation? How did he meet Gallaudet?
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Clerc met Gallaudet In London, where his mentor was to lectured and demonstrated their teaching methods. One of their lectures on July 10 happened to be attended by the Yankee Congregationalist minister, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet. Gallaudet was interested in Sicard’s teaching and had a meeting with him. Sicard them introduced Gallaudet to