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 opened on August the 4th, 1856.[1] It was the first school of the deaf in Atlantic Canada. (The Halifax School for the Blind was opened on Morris Street in 1871.) There was later a dispute over who the true founder was, William Gray (1806-1881), a deaf Scottish immigrant who was the first teacher in the back room of a house in Argyle Street, or George Tait (1828-1904), another deaf Scot, who claimed to have been the driving force behind the establishment of the school.[2] Gray was sacked in 1870 for being intoxicated and for threatening pupils with violence.[3]

James Scott Hutton, first principal of the Halifax School for the Deaf
Monument Halifax School for the Deaf, Gottingen St., Halifax, Nova Scotia
Students of Halifax School For Deaf

The first principal of the school was James Scott Hutton, who remained with the school 34 years.[4] William Cunard (son of Sir Samuel Cunard) eventually built a school, which was completed in 1896 and was attended by 90 students.

Following the Halifax Explosion, the main building was temporarily closed for repairs. Half of the students attended classes on the campus of Acadia College in Wolfville, while others remained without education until the classes were relocated back to Halifax.[5]

The school closed in June 1961.[6]

A monument marks the location of the home, which was erected by the Eastern Canada Association of the Deaf.

See also

References

  1. Carbin, Clifton F., Deaf Heritage in Canada, 1996,p.125-7
  2. Carbin, Clifton F., Deaf Heritage in Canada, 1996, p.125-7
  3. Carbin, Clifton F., Deaf Heritage in Canada, 1996, p.126
  4. Hutton - Canadian Biography
  5. Halifax Explosion: The Deaf Experience
  6. Carbin, Clifton F., Deaf Heritage in Canada, 1996, p.123
  7. https://www.loc.gov/resource/magbell.03700618/seq-5#seq-5
  8. http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/green_francis_5E.html

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