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Deaf culture in earlier eras - Coggle Diagram
Deaf culture in earlier eras
Deaf community has ben segregated and mistreated for "differences"
Deaf culture has grown form past generations' experience's
Small and isolated deaf families and communities begin to grow
Language becomes begins to see growth even in a predominately hearing country
Varied life experiences of deaf people indicate a genesis, some opposed while others held business and were a part of communities
Deaf indigenous indians are documented in 1618, by church officilals
Roger Williams, church leader proves this to true stating " some are born deaf and so dumb" which was appropriate at the time
Attitudes towards deafness varied by area, city, locals,
certain areas of the country saw doable and deaf people as a burden and shunned them from town.
Pennsylvania in 1676, provided aid for mentally viable poeple
people would associate speech impendiments and diabliltties with sins and god
Mssachuetes has documented marriages between deaf people in the seventeenth century
Records of Jonathan Lambert owning a slave ship, had a family, was sociable with visors on the vinyard which was a seemingly normal life
Martha's Vineyard conducted city meetings and business in sign language
Older people who lost their hearing and sight felt comfort with the acceptance of others, especially in church
Same year, Rebeca Nurse was murder accused of witch craft
More records of deaf people in the eighteenth cdentury
Moore family proved that deaf men were able to have respectable occupations and be married
Native sign language were being analyzed and researched
Signs brought from purpose were likely merged with native American signs and other sign varaietes
Tutoring in the late 1700s finally becomes recorded, Samuel edge