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J (Joseph) Schuyler Long (1869 - October 31, 1933) was an educator, author, and principal. He taught deaf children and authored the first standard picture dictionary of sign Language after becoming deaf himself as a child. He also wrote a book of poetry titled ''Out of the Silence''. ==Biography== He became deaf in 1881 and entered the Iowa School for the Deaf. He graduated in 1884 and entered Gallaudet College in Washington, D.C. In 1889 he became a teacher of the deaf and an athletic director at the Wisconsin School for the Deaf. He received his degree from Gallaudet College in 1895.In 1901 he was a head teacher at the Iowa School for the Deaf and an editor of the school periodical, The Iowa Hawkeye (the mascot later changed to the bobcat). In 1902 he was made acting principal and in 1908 full principal.〔 He published the dictionary ''The Sign Language. A Manual of Signs'' in 1909.〔 The Schuyler Long Collection at Galludet College includes the original 32 photograph plates used in the first edition of his Sign Language dictionary, it was the first standard picture dictionary of sign language and has been referred to as "The Deaf man's equivalent of Webster's Dictionary".〔 In 1914 Long received a Doctor of Letters Degree from Gallaudet College. In 1928 he began work on an anthology of poems by deaf authors. On October 31, 1933 he died from heart failure at the age of 64. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「J. Schuyler Long」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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