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  1. Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet (Filadelfia, 10 de diciembre de 1787 - 1851), educador estadounidense, pionero de la enseñanza a sordos. [1]

  2. 21 de jun. de 2018 · Para muchos Sordos norteamericanos, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet es considerado el padre de la ASL. Esta versión no carece de un cariz mítico. No es posible saber qué sistema de comunicación había entre los Sordos de los Estados Unidos antes de la aparición de las escuelas de sordos.

  3. Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet (December 10, 1787 – September 10, 1851) was an American educator. Along with Laurent Clerc and Mason Cogswell, he co-founded the first permanent institution for the education of the deaf in North America, and he became its first principal.

  4. Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet (born Dec. 10, 1787, Philadelphia, Pa., U.S.—died Sept. 10, 1851, Hartford, Conn.) was an educational philanthropist and founder of the first American school for the deaf. After graduating from Yale College in 1805, Gallaudet studied theology at Andover.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. 21 de may. de 2018 · Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet (1787-1851), American educator, founded the first free school for the deaf in America. Thomas Gallaudet was born in Philadelphia on Dec. 10, 1787. His family moved to Hartford, Conn., where he attended grammar school.

  6. Gallaudet University has been the educational, political, social, and economic engine of the deaf and signing community on a national and global scale for more than 150 years. Our story began in 1816 when Laurent Clerc and Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet crossed the Atlantic from Paris, France, to the United States with a dream to open the country’s ...

  7. Edward Miner Gallaudet, the son of Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, founder of the first school for deaf students in the United States, became the new school’s superintendent. Congress authorized the institution to confer college degrees in 1864, and President Abraham Lincoln signed the bill into law.