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School History
In February of 1843, the state of Indiana, even though nearly bankrupt,
recognized its responsibility to educate its Deaf residents by levying a tax of
two mills ( 1/1000 ) of each hundred dollars worth of property. Money generated
from this tax was appropriated for a school for Deaf children. The state also
rewarded the efforts of James McClean, a Deaf man from New York, with a payment
of $200 in recognition of his attempt to establish a school in Parke County,
Indiana. While his efforts lasted only a year, they served to draw the attention
of the General Assembly to the need for education of Deaf children in Indiana.
William Willard, a Deaf man teaching at the Ohio School for the Deaf in
Columbus, traveled to Indianapolis in May 1843 and presented himself with his
credentials to the General Assembly proposing the establishment of a school for
Deaf children in Indiana. On May 30, 1843, the General Assembly enacted a
resolution endorsing William Willard's interest in opening schools for the Deaf.
Willard, a graduate of the
American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Connecticut, had been a student of the
great Laurent Clerc, "the Father of Deaf Education" in America. His wife, Eliza
Young Willard, was an alumnus of the Ohio School for the Deaf. Together, they
advertised throughout the state of Indiana for potential students. Willard
traveled the state on horseback that summer demonstrating his methods and
recruiting students for the school. On October 1, 1843, the Willard School
opened with twelve pupils. William and Eliza both served as instructors with
Williard being responsible for the boys' general care and his wife responsible
for the girls' general care.
The school prospered and in December of that same year, the state passed a
law that established the Willard school as a state institution. Willard was
appointed principal of this school which, after a law passed in January 1846,
became the sixth state school for the Deaf in the nation and the first state
school to provide free education to Deaf children. In 1850, after being located
in three different rented quarters in the downtown area of Indianapolis, the
state built a spacious new school east of the city on the National Road.
The Indiana School for the Deaf, at that time named the Indiana Asylum for
the Education of the Deaf and Dumb, remained at this location on the corner of
State and Washington Streets for many years. Willard continued as a teacher at
the school until his retirement in 1860. Across the street from the school,
Willard had a beautiful Greek Revival home built. There, he and his family
resided in what was considered one of the finest homes in Indianapolis. After
much wear and decay on the State Street campus, the state approved the
construction of a new campus for the school on East 42nd Street on the north
side of Indianapolis.
The construction and opening of this campus was delayed from 1907 until 1911
due to the cost overruns and faulty construction. Much public debate was held
about the cost of such magnificent buildings of monumental stature that became
the present day campus of the Indiana School for the Deaf. Located on 80 acres
in a beautiful campus setting, the school's main buildings are registered as
historic landmarks. The Indiana School for the Deaf is a fully accredited school
and a national resource center. It is recognized nationally for its leadership
in education, its advocacy of American Sign Language and being the first state
Deaf school to adopt a Bilingual/Bicultural Philosophy.
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