date QS:P,+1850-00-00T00:00:00Z/7,P1319,+1870-00-00T00:00:00Z/9,P1326,+1880-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
المصدر
Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division. Brady-Handy Photograph Collection. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cwpbh.04010. CALL NUMBER: LC-BH826- 29808 A <P&P>[P&P]
هذه الصُّورة مُوفَّرة مِن قِبل مكتبة الكونغرس قسم المطبوعات والصُّور تحت الهويَّة الرَّقميَّة cwpbh.04010. لا يُشير هذه الوَسم إلى حالة حقوق التَّأليف والنَّشر الخاصَّة بالعمل المُرفَق؛ لا يزال وَسم حقوق التَّأليف والنَّشر مَطلُوباً، راجع كومنز:ترخيص لمزيدٍ من المعلومات.
Deutsch: Edward Miner Gallaudet (* 1837; † 1917), Sohn von Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet gründete 1857 in Washington, DC mit dem Philanthropen und US-Postminister Amos Kendall die "Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind". Es war das erste College für taube Studenten, das 1864 nach seinem Vater in Gallaudet University umbenannt wurde.
English: Edward Miner Gallaudet (February 5, 1837– September 26, 1917), son of Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, was a famous early educator of the deaf in Washington. Little is known about Edward Miner's childhood. However, it is known that at the age of 16 he worked at a bank in Hartford, Connecticut which he found dull. He promptly quit this job and joined the staff at the American Asylum for the Deaf (now called the American School for the Deaf) in Hartford, Connecticut and began his educational career as a teacher. While he was teaching, Edward Miner continued his education at Trinity College in Hartford and received his masters and doctorate degrees.
Mathew Brady died in 1896 and Levin C. Handy died in 1932. Photographs in this collection are in the public domain in the United States as works published before 1930 or as unpublished works whose copyright term has expired (life of author + 70 years).
== Summary == {{Information |Description= Edward Miner Gallaudet. Library of Congress description: "Gallaudet, Proff. Edward M." |Source=Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division. Brady-Handy Photograph Collection