Halifax School for the Deaf
The Halifax School for the Deaf (The Deaf and Dumb Institution, Halifax) was an institution in Halifax, Nova Scotia that was founded in January 1856. It was the first school of the deaf in Atlantic Canada. (The Halifax School for the Blind was opened on Morris Street in 1871.) The first principal of the school was James Scott Hutton, who remained with the school 34 years.[1] William Cunard (son of Sir Samuel Cunard) eventually built a school, which was completed in 1896 and was attended by 90 students. A monument marks the location of the home, which was erected by Eastern Canada Association of the Deaf.
See also
- History of Nova Scotia
- History of Halifax, Nova Scotia
- Alexander Graham Bell[2]
- James Cuppaidge Cochran
References
Texts
Further reading
- History of Halifax School for the Deaf
- Fearon, James. History of Halifax School for the Deaf. (1857-1893)
- J. Scott Hutton. Outlines of History and Biography. 1875
- J. Scott Hutton. Geography of Nova Scotia. 1869.
- J. Scott Hutton, "Deaf-Mute Education in the British Maritime Provinces," American Annals of the Deaf, Volume 14 (Raleigh, N. C.: Press of the Institution for the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind), pg 65-82.
- George Hutton - Scott's father, part 1
- George Hutton - Scott's father, part 2
- George Hutton, "Practicability and Advantages of Writing and Printing Natural Signs," American Annals of the Deaf, Volume 14 (Raleigh, N. C.: Press of the Institution for the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind), pg 157.
- J. Scott Hutton, Language Lessons for the Deaf and Dumb (Halifax, N. S.: The Pupils at the Institution Press, 1878).
- Autobiography of George Tait, a deaf mute, who first gave instructions to the deaf and dumb in the city of Halifax ; also an extract from an American paper on teachers and modes of teaching the deaf and dumb. (1892)
Coordinates: 44°39′22″N 63°35′21″W / 44.656014°N 63.589110°W
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