UCL Ear Institute & Action on Hearing Loss Libraries – Sign Language
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UCL Ear Institute & Action on Hearing Loss Libraries – Sign Language
4y ago
Continued from Heathen Bristol
Burns moved back to London “engaged by the committee of the then ‘Adult Institution for providing Employment, &c. for the Deaf and Dumb,’ where he served until June, 1845, when he was obliged to join the old congregation, who, under the Rev. Robert Simson, M.A., appointed him biblical instructor and assistant secretary.” (ibid)
After 1849 he was the head and honorary secretary of this organization.
TO THE DEAF AND DUMB AND THEIR FRIENDS. Price 2s. 6d.. A FAITHFUL AND CHARACTERISTIC LITHOGRAPHED PORTRAIT of MR. MATTHEW ROBERT BURNS, DEAF AND DUMB FROM BIRTH ..read more
UCL Ear Institute & Action on Hearing Loss Libraries – Sign Language
5y ago
Born in Deptford, Kent, in 1846, and son of James Sturdee, a tailor, and his wife Maria, James William Arthur Sturdee (1846-1910) was educated at Dartford Grammar School (which Gilby has, probably erroneously, as Deptford Grammar School). “By some means he came into contact with the Rev. S. Smith, and on his advice went to the Institution at Newcastle-on-Tyne, where he learned to teach the deaf for a space, and returned to London later, where he became a student missionary to the deaf, attending lectures at King’s College, and was ordained Deacon by the Bishop of Rochester in 1876.” (Gilby, 19 ..read more
UCL Ear Institute & Action on Hearing Loss Libraries – Sign Language
5y ago
This is a story touching on the life of Emma Conway, a Deaf girl, who was briefly in the news for all the wrong reasons, before sinking again into obscurity.
She was born in Staffordshire, at Brownhill(s), Wallsall in 1869, but the family moved to Dosthill, near Tamworth. Her father, Isaac, worked as a labourer, and two brothers were miners. She also had at least two sisters. Emma was born deaf, and probably had no education in any formal way. The 1881 census does not say she was a scholar, when she was thirteen. Her sister, Eliza, was married and lived close by. She probably had no cont ..read more
UCL Ear Institute & Action on Hearing Loss Libraries – Sign Language
5y ago
Doris Florence Morgan was born in Acton on the 13th of August, 1906, daughter of a ‘glove cleaner’ (later a dry cleaner) Henry Morgan, and his wife, Florence. The 1911 census, at which time they were living at 34 Goldsmith Road, Acton, tells us she was ‘deaf and dumb from birth.’ George William Munday was born in 1905, son a Albert (a cabman) and Annie Isabella. The 1911 census tells us that he was ‘deaf and dumb from 1 year.’ The two were married in April, 1933.
This story is simply told as all I have apart from this information, what I have is two newspaper clippings with Selwyn Oxley’s ..read more
UCL Ear Institute & Action on Hearing Loss Libraries – Sign Language
5y ago
According to Meir and Sandler’s 2008 book, A Language in Space: the Story of Israeli Sign Language (p.185), we know nothing of the signs used by deaf people, Jewish or Arabic, in the late Ottoman period in Jerusalem. Persecution in Europe in the 1930s saw immigration into British mandated Palestine, and an early Deaf immigrant was Moshe Bamberger, who arrived in Jerusalem in 1935 (ibid). A ‘Jewish School for Deaf Mutes’ had been established there in November, 1932, with the backing of a Jewish man from Shanghai who had lost his hearing, and a teacher from the Jewish Deaf School in Berlin was ..read more