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| You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> William Swett | |
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SWETT, William, educator, born in Henniker, New Hampshire, 13 August, 1825; died in Beverly, Massachusetts, 25 March, 1884. He was a deaf-mute, and was graduated at the institution for deaf-mutes at Hartford, Connecticut, in 1842, after which he became president of the Gallaudet association of deaf-mutes. From 1879 till his death he was superintendent of the New England industrial school for deaf-mutes, which he founded in Beverly. He edited the "Deaf-Mute's Friend," and was the author of "The Adventures of a Deaf-Mute in the White Mountains" (Henniker, 1874).
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