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This is an incomplete list of notable deaf people.

Important historical figures in deaf history and culture


The idea that a person who was deaf could achieve a notable or distinguished status was not common until the latter half of the 18th century, when Abbé Charles-Michel de l'Épée founded the world's first public school for deaf students in Paris. The Abbe de l'Epee was one of the first advocates for using sign language in deaf education, as a means to raise deaf people to literacy and to provide an avenue to an independent lifestyle. Prior to de l'Épée, only the deaf children of royal, aristocratic or wealthy families were afforded any type of education.

Épée originally favored using a fabricated sign system, similar to Signed Exact English, based on French grammar and sound. The local Deaf communities insisted on maintaining their own Paris sign language, and on his deathbed de l'Épée wrote his final work decrying all constructed systems and finally endorsing the use of the natural signed languages made by Deaf people.

The success of the Paris school spawned similar schools throughout Europe and the New World. Significant in American history, deaf Frenchman Laurent Clerc, both a student and teacher at the Paris school (1798-1816), and Rev. Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, a hearing American, founded the first school for the deaf in Hartford, Connecticut in 1816. Clerc, along with Paris school faculty members Jean Massieu and Ferdinand Berthier formed the core of a group of pioneering deaf intellectuals. They are joined by many people on this list who, like them, were born deaf, used a sign language as their mother language, and were notable for their leadership and accomplishments.

  • Melville Ballard, American teacher, first undergraduate to receive a degree from Gallaudet College.
  • Dean Barton-Smith, Australian, decathlon athlete at the 1992 Olympic Games
  • Ferdinand Berthier, French intellectual, first deaf person to receive the French Legion of Honor. Founder of world's first deaf organization.
  • Eliza Boardman, American, member of the first class of students in America's first school for the deaf; wife of Laurent Clerc.
  • Edmund Booth, American publisher, teacher and adventurer.
  • Julia Brace, (1807-1884), early American deafblind student at the Hartford Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb.
  • John Brewster Jr., American, leading artist of the Federalist Period in America.
  • Laura Bridgman, (1829-1889), American, first deafblind student of Dr. Samuel Howe at the Perkins School for the Blind.
  • Thomas Lewis Brown, American, first deaf person to be elected to a state legislature. Co-founder of first national organization of the deaf.
  • Laurent Clerc, (1785-1869), French-American, co-founder of first school for the deaf in America. First deaf teacher of the deaf in America.
  • Alice Cogswell, American student who inspired the founding of the first school for the deaf in the United States.
  • Pierre Desloges, (1742-??), French deaf writer and bookbinder. First known deaf person to publish a book.
  • Theophilus d'Estrella, American artist and first student at San Francisco's Institution for the Deaf.
  • Sophia Fowler, American, wife of Gallaudet University founder Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet.
  • Edwin A. Hodgson, American, former president of the National Association of the Deaf.
  • William Elsworth "Dummy" Hoy, (1862-1961), American baseball player.
  • Mabel Hubbard, American, daughter of Gardiner Green Hubbard and wife of Alexander Graham Bell
  • Regina Olsen Hughes, American, distinguished employee at the Smithsonian Institution.
  • Helen Keller, American deafblind writer and lecturer.
  • Juliette Gordon Low, founder of the Girl Scouts of America
  • Jean Massieu, French deaf intellectual and internationally renowned public figure. World's first deaf teacher of the deaf.
  • Granville Redmond, American painter.
  • Laura Redden Searing, American journalist and poet.
  • Howard E. "Rocky" Stone, American, founder of Self Help for Hard of Hearing People, now known as Hearing Loss Association of America.
  • Douglas Tilden, American sculptor.
  • Job Turner, American educator, first president of the Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind.

Notable Children of Deaf Adults (CODA)


Notable Deaf people who are active in the Deaf community


Notable people with a hearing loss


Musicians with a hearing loss


Lists of people with disabilities | Deaf culture | Deaf people

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "List of deaf people".

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