I'm not sure if have you seen this post before anyway ?
Could the United States of America have become a free country without the help of deaf people?
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By Roslyn Rosen
We all know the United States is a free country today. We also know that more than two hundred years ago, Amerian colonists fought to gain independence from England. But, do you know how it really started? Do you know how deaf people helped to fight and win freedom for America? Let me tell you.
My great, great, great, great grandfather was born in Martha's Vineyard (near Boston, Massachusetts) in 1730. His name was Silence Dogood. At that time, many deaf people lived on Martha's Vineyard, more than in other parts of the country. Usually there is about one deaf person for each one thousand hearing people. But, on Martha's Vineyard there was 1 deaf person for each 155 hearing people. The hearing people accepted deafness as a natural thing. They signed and used total communication; there was no problem. When my great, great, great, great grandfather Silence Dogood lived, the United States was not a country yet; it was still thirteen colonies under the rule of the English government.
You might know a famous man who lived at that time--Ben Franklin. He was a famous inventor, printer, scientist, and politician. He met my great, great, great, great grandfather and became fascinated with him. They wrote notes back and forth. Ben hired Silence Dogood to work with him. Ben did not really have a good education when he was growing up. But writing notes back and forth with my great, great, great, great grandfather helped Ben to become a skilled writer. Ben started writing articles for newspapers, but he felt people wouldn't really pay attention to him. so, he used the name Dogood as his pen name
My great, great, great, great grandfather worked with Ben Franklin in his print shop and they wrote the newspaper the Pennsylvania Gazette. After a while, Ben decided to hire more deaf people. Writing notes gave him a really good idea; it made him think about establishing a post office so that everyone could send notes. And that's how the post office system got started in the United States
In those days, the United States was under the control of the English Parliament (government). Parliament tried to increase taxes. The colonists did not fight or complain. One day in Boston in 1770, a colonist tried to get a soldier's attention. The soldier did not respond, so the colonist threw a rock at the soldier. British soldiers immediately shot into the crowds and killed five citizens and wounded seven.
When that news reached Ben Franklin, he said, "We have to put it right into the newspaper, that the British soldiers killed our people." But Ben was in a real hurry; he didn't have time to write the story down. So he just told the deaf printer, "Five people were killed and seven wounded by the British." The deaf printer prepared the headline, "5,700 People Killed in Boston Massacre!" The newspaper was printed and distributed. Ben Franklin returned to the shop, saw that headline, and said to the deaf printer, "No, that's wrong! I said 5, not 5,700! You're fired!"
Many people who saw the newspaper became very angry. Before, they had thought, "Oh, so what, we don't mind paying a little bit of tax. No big deal." But, when the Boston Massacre happened, they started to get real upset. They wanted to be free from English rule. So they all gathered at the print shop and they said, "Ben Franklin, you're right about the British. We want to join the army. We can fight. We'll work together to be free." Then they all left.
Could the United States of America have become a free country without the help of deaf people?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
By Roslyn Rosen
We all know the United States is a free country today. We also know that more than two hundred years ago, Amerian colonists fought to gain independence from England. But, do you know how it really started? Do you know how deaf people helped to fight and win freedom for America? Let me tell you.
My great, great, great, great grandfather was born in Martha's Vineyard (near Boston, Massachusetts) in 1730. His name was Silence Dogood. At that time, many deaf people lived on Martha's Vineyard, more than in other parts of the country. Usually there is about one deaf person for each one thousand hearing people. But, on Martha's Vineyard there was 1 deaf person for each 155 hearing people. The hearing people accepted deafness as a natural thing. They signed and used total communication; there was no problem. When my great, great, great, great grandfather Silence Dogood lived, the United States was not a country yet; it was still thirteen colonies under the rule of the English government.
You might know a famous man who lived at that time--Ben Franklin. He was a famous inventor, printer, scientist, and politician. He met my great, great, great, great grandfather and became fascinated with him. They wrote notes back and forth. Ben hired Silence Dogood to work with him. Ben did not really have a good education when he was growing up. But writing notes back and forth with my great, great, great, great grandfather helped Ben to become a skilled writer. Ben started writing articles for newspapers, but he felt people wouldn't really pay attention to him. so, he used the name Dogood as his pen name
My great, great, great, great grandfather worked with Ben Franklin in his print shop and they wrote the newspaper the Pennsylvania Gazette. After a while, Ben decided to hire more deaf people. Writing notes gave him a really good idea; it made him think about establishing a post office so that everyone could send notes. And that's how the post office system got started in the United States
In those days, the United States was under the control of the English Parliament (government). Parliament tried to increase taxes. The colonists did not fight or complain. One day in Boston in 1770, a colonist tried to get a soldier's attention. The soldier did not respond, so the colonist threw a rock at the soldier. British soldiers immediately shot into the crowds and killed five citizens and wounded seven.
When that news reached Ben Franklin, he said, "We have to put it right into the newspaper, that the British soldiers killed our people." But Ben was in a real hurry; he didn't have time to write the story down. So he just told the deaf printer, "Five people were killed and seven wounded by the British." The deaf printer prepared the headline, "5,700 People Killed in Boston Massacre!" The newspaper was printed and distributed. Ben Franklin returned to the shop, saw that headline, and said to the deaf printer, "No, that's wrong! I said 5, not 5,700! You're fired!"
Many people who saw the newspaper became very angry. Before, they had thought, "Oh, so what, we don't mind paying a little bit of tax. No big deal." But, when the Boston Massacre happened, they started to get real upset. They wanted to be free from English rule. So they all gathered at the print shop and they said, "Ben Franklin, you're right about the British. We want to join the army. We can fight. We'll work together to be free." Then they all left.