Girish Mahajan (Editor)

William Willard (deaf educator)

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Name
  
William Willard


Role
  
Deaf educator

William Willard (deaf educator) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonscc

Died
  
February 15, 1881, Indianapolis, Indiana, United States

Organizations founded
  
Indiana School for the Deaf

Similar
  
Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, Harvey Prindle Peet, Jean Massieu

William Willard (November 1, 1809 – February 15, 1881) founded Indiana's school for the deaf in Indianapolis, Indiana, which later became the Indiana School for the Deaf. He was one of the most important deaf persons in the deaf community.

Willard was born on November 1, 1809 in Brattleboro, Vermont. He grew up in Rockingham, Vermont, and attended American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Connecticut. During his schooling, he was a student of the famous Laurent Clerc, who was and is considered the "Father of Deaf Education" in America. After he graduated, he taught at a school for the deaf in Columbus, Ohio, which was called Ohio School for the Deaf. There, he met Eliza Young, who was also deaf and a teacher, and married her. Eventually, the both of them traveled to Indianapolis, Indiana, and William proposed the establishment of a school for the Deaf.

He and Eliza traveled throughout the state of Indiana on horseback, recruiting potential deaf students in order to form a school. On October 1, 1843 was the first day of school, and William's school had twelve students. William and his wife, Eliza, both were teachers. Eventually, Indiana passed a law that established the school as a state institution, and after William became Principal of the school, Indiana passed a law that officially declared Indiana School for the Deaf as the sixth state school for the Deaf to provide free education to all deaf and hard of hearing students.

References

William Willard (deaf educator) Wikipedia