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American and Annals
Annals of the Association of American Geographers 99 ( 1 ), 138-162.
* Annals of the Association of American Geographers
Annals of the Association of American Geographers 98 ( 1 ), pp. 120 – 134.
Annals of the Association of American Geographers 84, p. XXX.
In 1830, Gallaudet provided a description of his method to the American Annals of Education which included teaching children to recognize a total of 50 sight words written on cards and by 1837 the method was adopted by the Boston Primary School Committee.
" American influence on Japanese thinking " Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.
" Annals of the American Academy 74 ( 1917 ): 123-40.
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol.
McPhee has received many literary honors, including the Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction, awarded for Annals of the Former World.
Fred K. Schaefer's article Exceptionalism in geography: A Methodological Examination published in American journal Annals ( Association of American Geographers ) and his critique of regionalism had a big impact on economic geography.
* " Agricultural Productivity and Pressure of Population ," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol.
* " The Geography of Human Productivity ," Annals of the Association of American Geographers Vol.
" Annals of the Association of American Geographers Vol.
The Mass Psychology of Fascism by Wilhelm Reich ", Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science.
" Many American authors have cited the manuscript in their works ; for example, Cotton Mather referenced it in Magnalia Christi Americana and Thomas Prince referred to it in A Chronological History of New-England in the Form of Annals.
In ' American Annals of the deaf ' ( volume 148 no.
* Banning, C. " Food Shortage and Public Health, First Half of 1945 ," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol.
" The Netherlands during German Occupation ," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol.
Evidence of continuing trips includes the Maine Penny, a Norwegian coin from King Olaf Kyrre's reign ( 1067 – 1093 ) allegedly found in a Native American archaeological site in the U. S. state of Maine, suggesting an exchange between the Norse and the Native Americans late in or after the 11th century ; and an entry in the Icelandic Annals from 1347 which refers to a small Greenlandic vessel with a crew of eighteen that arrived in Iceland while attempting to return to Greenland from Markland with a load of timber.
* Brown, Ralph H. " The American Geographies of Jedidiah Morse ," Annals of the Association of American Geographers ( Volume 31, Number 3, 1941 ): 145 – 217.
* Miller, Donald, E., Postdenominational Christianity in the Twenty-First Century, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol.
" Annals of the Association of American Geographers 92 ( 1 ): 52-74.

American and Deaf
* 1817 – Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet and Laurent Clerc founded the American School for the Deaf, the first American school for deaf students, in Hartford, Connecticut.
ASL has come a long way from its condemned days of banned use to being viewed as a grammatical language, which is the main form of communication in American Deaf culture.
* Bimodal Bilingualism in the American Deaf Community
* 1787 – Deaf Smith, American frontiersman and revolutionary ( d. 1837 )
* April 15 – The American School for the Deaf opens in Hartford, Connecticut.
An Introduction to American Deaf Culture.
He was then in turn a tutor at Yale, and as he began to lose his hearing due to a hereditary condition he became a teacher ( 1831 — 1832 ) in the American Asylum for the Deaf and Dumb at Hartford, Connecticut, and a teacher ( 1832 — 1838 ) in the New York Institute for the Instruction of the Deaf and Dumb.
* In 2000, The Deaf World in Wax, a traveling exhibit, featured Juliette Low as a famous deaf American.
* Deaf American literature
In the early 19th century, a new educational philosophy began to emerge on the mainland, and the country's first school for the deaf opened in 1817 in Hartford, Connecticut ( now called the American School for the Deaf ).
This school became known as the birthplace of the Deaf community in the U. S., and the different sign systems used there, including MVSL, merged to become American Sign Language or ASL — now one of the largest community languages in the country.
Reverend Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, LL. D., ( December 10, 1787 – September 10, 1851 ) was a renowned American pioneer in the education of the Deaf.
When opened in 1817, it was called the " American Asylum for Deaf-Mutes " in Connecticut, but it is now known as the American School for the Deaf.
The two men toured New England and successfully raised private and public funds to found a school for Deaf students in Hartford, which later became known as the American School for the Deaf.
* A memorial honoring the 100th anniversary of Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet's birth was erected in 1854 at the American School for the Deaf.
“ Booth's reminiscences of Gallaudet ,” American Annals of the Deaf, Volume 26, Number 3, ( July 1881 ), pages 200 – 202.
Reprinted in: American Annals of the Deaf, vol.
“ Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet ,” American Annals of the Deaf, Volume 33, Number 1, ( October 1888 ), pages 43 – 54.
* A Discourse, Delivered at the Dedication of the American Asylum for the Education of Deaf and Dumb Persons.
Copies of the improved Fifteen Puzzle made their way to Syracuse, New York by way of Noyes ' son, Frank, and from there, via sundry connections, to Watch Hill, RI, and finally to Hartford ( Connecticut ), where students in the American School for the Deaf started manufacturing the puzzle and, by December 1879, selling them both locally and in Boston, Massachusetts.

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