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NOTES Prologue 1. McPherson, A Fair Chance in the Race of Life, 5. 2. Gallaudet, History of the College for the Deaf, 67. 3. Ibid., 36. 4.Thanks to Michael J. Olson for this observation. ChaPter one 1. See, for example,Van Cleve and Crouch, A Place of Their Own. 2. McCullough, The Greater Journey, 99. 3. Adapted from http://pr.gallaudet.edu/GallaudetHistory/ page1.html. 4. Ibid.The story of the Institution’s support by and close association with the Congress and government of the United States will be a recurring theme in this book.The continuous funding since 1858 is believed to make Gallaudet University the third oldest educational institution to receive federal support, following the United States Military Academy at West Point and the Naval Academy in Annapolis. 5. Gallaudet, History of the College, 32. 6. Ibid., 36. 7. Ibid., 227. 8. Ibid., 233. In the text, Goodwin is identified as “President ,”but the University of Pennsylvania did not create the position of president until 1930. 9. Ibid., 57. 10. Ibid., 59. 11. Ibid., 100. 12. Ibid., 107. 13. Boatner, Voice of the Deaf; Marilyn Daniels, Benedictine Roots in the Development of Deaf Education: Listening with the Heart (Westport, CT: Bergin and Garvey, 1997); First Church of Christ, Historical Catalogue of the First Church in Hartford: 1633-1885 (Hartford, CT: Case, Lockwood and Brainard, 1885); Gallaudet, History of the College, 24, 38, 64; Francis R. Kowsky,“Gallaudet College: A High Victorian Campus,”Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C. (1972): 439–467; Caroline Mills, Caroline Brewster, Helen Story, and Florence Snow, eds., Catalog of Officers, Graduates and Nongraduates of Smith College (Northampton, MA: Alumnae Association of Smith College, 1911); “Charitable Bequests,” New York Times, January 8, 1888; “Mrs. Closson Dies; Daughter of D.C. College Founder,”New York Times, December 28, 1942; “Dr. Gallaudet’s Daughter Dies in New Haven: Special Dispatch to The Post,”Washington Post, December 14, 1942; Winefield, Never the Twain Shall Meet; Oliver Norton Worden, Some Records of Persons by the Name of Worden, Particularly of Over One Thousand of the Ancestors, Kin, and Descendants of John and Elizabeth Worden, of Washington County, Rhode Island (Lewisburg, PA: Railway Press of J.R. Cornelius, 1868). 14. Gallaudet Almanac, 159. 15.“About the GUAA,”accessed October 21, 2013, http:// www.gallaudet.edu/development_and_alumni_relations/ alumni_relations/alumni_association_(guaa)/about_the_ guaa.html. 16. Jack R. Gannon,“Gallaudet College Alumni Association : Founding,”in Gallaudet Encyclopedia of Deaf People and Deafness, vol. 1, ed. John V.Van Cleve (New York: McGraw Hill, 1987), 454. 17. Ibid., 455. 18. Stokoe, Bernard, and Padden,“An Elite Group in Deaf Society,”307. 19.“The Palisades,Washington, D.C,”retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Palisades,_ Washington,_D.C.; Gaston,“College Chronicle. Along the Road in Germany. Cane Rush. Et Cetera,”The Deaf-Mutes’ Journal, October 23, 1884; Olaf Hanson, “Gallaudet Athletics in the Early Eighties,”The Silent Worker 36 no. 6 (1924): 274–276; Griffin O’Hara,“Class of 2012 Plants Their Class Tree,”The Buff and Blue, November 18, 2010, retrieved from www.thebuffandblue.net/?p=4433; “Paper Chase (game),”retrieved from http://en.wikipedia. org/wiki/Paper_Chase_%28game%29; “A Grist of Graduates,”Washington Post, June 22, 1881; “Beside the Class Tree,”Washington Post, June 5, 1890; “Dance for Gallaudet Graduates,”Washington Post, May 7, 1897; “Dancing with Deaf Mutes,”Washington Post, June 18, 1884; “Easter Camp of Mutes,”Washington Post, March 31. 1904; 184 notes “Mutes in Camp,”Washington Post,March 28,1907;“Presentation Hop at Gallaudet,”Washington Post,May 10,1903;“Split on Cane Rush,”Washington Post,November 16,1905. 20. Atwood, Gallaudet College, 35–36. 21. Gallaudet, History of the College, 188. 22. Ibid., 67. 23. Ibid., 76–96. 24. McCullough, The Greater Journey, 267–329. 25. Gallaudet, History of the College, 105. 26. Ibid., 180. 27. Gallaudet, History of the College, 19, 97, 105, 199; Boatner, Voice of the Deaf, 76, 163. 28. Ibid., 194–96. 29. Ibid., 193–94. 30. Ibid., 203. 31. Ibid., 211. 32. Garrick Mallery, Sign Language among North American Indians Compared with That among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes. 33. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_International_ Congress_on_Education_of_the_Deaf. 34. Gallaudet, History of the College, 140. 35. Baynton,“The Curious Death of Sign Language Studies.” 36. Gallaudet, History of the College, 182–83. 37. Ibid.; Winefield, Never the Twain Shall Meet, 60. Deaf students were not admitted to the graduate school as regular degree-seeking students until 1960,although a...