A group of amateur vaudeville performers are assembled on the stage in the auditorium of the Charles Thompson Memorial Hall. Two performers are dressed as a young girl and a young boy, one woman is draped in the American flag, and one man looks like Charlie Chaplin. The man standing in the center of the back row and looking like George Washington is Anton Schroeder.
Attendees are gathered for a social dinner event in the dining hall on the first floor of the Charles Thompson Memorial Hall. The window that opens on to the kitchen is visible in the background. The woman facing the camera on the front right end is Eldora Jones.
Attendees are gathered on the steps of Mott Hall. The Fifth National Conference of Principals and Superintendents of Institutions for Deaf-Mutes took place during July 9-13, 1884 at the Minnesota Institute for the Deaf, Dumb and Blind in Faribault. At this conference, the advisability of employing deaf teachers to teach deaf students was discussed, and this issue became part of the oralism vs. manualism debate in deaf education. The man sitting in the front row on the left end is Dr. James L. Smith. Sitting to the right of Dr. Smith is Olof Hanson. The bearded man in a buttoned jacket standing in the front row, to the right of a woman in a white dress, is Dr. Philip G. Gillett, Superintendent of the Illinois School for the Deaf. The bearded man to the right of Dr. Gillett is Judge Rodney A. Mott. The man with a mustache standing in the front row on the right end is George Wing. The man with a hand thrust inside his jacket in the second row, fourth from the left, is Edward Miner Gallaudet, President of the Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb (later renamed Gallaudet College). The man with a dark beard standing to the right of center, behind a woman in a striped dress, is Alexander Graham Bell.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Attendees are gathered on the steps of Mott Hall. The Fifth National Conference of Principals and Superintendents of Institutions for Deaf-Mutes took place during July 9-13, 1884 at the Minnesota Institute for the Deaf, Dumb and Blind in Faribault. At this conference, the advisability of employing deaf teachers to teach deaf students was discussed, and this issue became part of the oralism vs. manualism debate in deaf education. The man sitting in the front row on the left end is Dr. James L. Smith. Sitting to the right of Dr. Smith is Olof Hanson. The bearded man in a buttoned jacket standing in the front row, to the right of a woman in a white dress, is Dr. Philip G. Gillett, Superintendent of the Illinois School for the Deaf. The bearded man to the right of Dr. Gillett is Judge Rodney A. Mott. The man with a mustache standing in the front row on the right end is George Wing. The man with a hand thrust inside his jacket in the second row, fourth from the left, is Edward Miner Gallaudet, President of the Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb (later renamed Gallaudet College). The man with a dark beard standing to the right of center, behind a woman in a striped dress, is Alexander Graham Bell.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' baseball team are posed in front of Mott Hall. An inscription on the back reads: "The property of Athletic Ass'n Per Edwin Isaacson, May 25, 1920."
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' baseball team are posed in front of Noyes Hall. In the front row, from left to right, are Anton Mallinger, John Jacobson, Alfred Melby, captain Anthony (Tony) Garbarino, Anders Gran, and Tobias Melby. In the back row, from left to right, are Hans Saterlund, assistant manager Carl E. Torell, Jerry Stewart, manager Victor R. Spence, William Hillmer, and Grant Martin.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' basketball team are assembled for a portrait. The man with a white beard seated in the center of the front row is Superintendent James N. Tate. Standing behind Superintendent Tate is coach Victor R. Spence.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' basketball team are posed with an award in front of the Gymnasium building. In the front row, from left to right, are William Berg, Bert Smith, Conrad Setran, Glen Samuelson, Carl Pehlgrim, and Waino Ekman. In the back row, from left to right, are faculty manager Wesley Lauritsen, student manager Herman Ahern, Robert Clark, Jasper Colianni, Jack Guyette, John Fatticci, and coach Lloyd Ambrosen.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Charles Thompson and friends are holding a fishing net in front of a gazebo at the summer camp at Lake Darling. Many deaf people camped at Lake Darling during this time, and thus it was called a "deaf colony." From left to right are Elwyn Smith (who was the CODA (child of deaf adults) son of Dr. James L. Smith), Charles Thompson, and Big (or Old) George, who worked at Mr. Thompson's home in Georgia. Standing in back is Margaret Brooks Thompson.
Charles Thompson is standing outside in front of a building with hunting dogs penned in a fenced enclosure. Writing on the back of the photo reads: "Chas. Thompson and his hunting dogs at Thomasville, Georgia, 1909."
Charles Thompson and his hunting party are standing in front of two Tally-Ho cars which are adapted for riding on a railroad. Writing on the back of the photo is by Charles Thompson's chauffeur Benjamin B. Foster, and reads: "A Sunday ride on a Florida logging railroad, 1910, Thomasville." Benjamin B. Foster is the man standing on the left end, and Charles Thompson is the man standing with a rifle on the right end.
Students in the first oral education class are assembled with a teacher in front of Noyes Hall. The student standing in the middle of the back row is Petra Fandrem Howard. The students in the back row, from left to right, are fingerspelling "F-I-R-S-T" for the word "first." The students in the front row, from left to right, are fingerspelling "O-R-A-L-0-6" for the word "oral" and year "1906."
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' football team are posed on the stairs in front of Tate Hall. The student without a helmet sitting in the front row on the right end is Maurice Potter. He was known for playing without a helmet. The man with a cap sitting to the right of Maurice Potter is coach Wesley Lauritsen.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' football team are assembled for a portrait. In the front row, from left to right, are Claren H. Yarger, "Spudge" the dog, and Theodore Ulstad. In the second row, from left to right, are Edmond Miland, Carl P. Magnuson, Superintendent James N. Tate, Edward Schultz, and Walter Sheehy. In the third row, from left to right, are coach Victor R. Spence, Alfred Mingus, John Berglin, Fritz Thoren, and Kristian Flaskerud. In the back row, from left to right, are Elmer Paulson, John Vig, Alfred Anderson, and William Henneman.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' football team are assembled in front of a school building. In the front row, from left to right, are John Stauber, Anton Mallinger, Edmund Joyce, Peter Kasperick, and John Wojciechowski. In the middle row, from left to right, are J.B. Bumgardner (housefather and coach), Frank Wheeler (teacher and manager), Louis Albert Roth (housefather and coach), Harrison Pettit, and Oscar Johnson. In the back row, from left to right, are Emil Hruska, Severin Berlan, Gottfried Soderfelt, Vladi Droskowski, Adolph Weber, Hugh Friel, and Ernest Ringnell.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members of the boys' football team are assembled outside. In the front row, from left to right, are John Mathews, Marvin Olson, Roger Golen, Frank Turk, William Stifter, R. Sund, William Arnold, Curtis Andresen, and Ralph Grommesh. In the second row, from left to right, are student manager Wilfred Lazarz, coach George Hanson, Burnell Rasmussen, Myron Smith, Jack Wright, Warren Bemlott, Rudolph Johnson, Kevin Meagher, Douglas Burke, assistant coach Edwin T. Johnson, and faculty manager Wesley Lauritsen. In the third row, from left to right, are Richard Stifter, Ralph Carty, Kenneth Pelarski, Keith Thompson, Dick Caswell, and Gerald Pelarski.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Students in the Senior Class of 1926 perform a Gallaudet Day program in the auditorium of Noyes Hall. Two students in the center are posing as the famous American statue of Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet and Alice Cogswell. Gallaudet was the founder of the American School for the Deaf, and Alice Cogswell was a student there. Both students are fingerspelling the letter "A" for the name "Alice."
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Student theater performers John Fatticci and Audree Bennett pose for a dramatic skit. Audree Bennett Norton went on to become one of the founders of the National Theater of the Deaf, and was the first deaf actor to appear on American television in shows such as Mannix, Family Affairs, and Man and the City.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
The student literary societies are assembled in the Noyes Hall auditorium. The senior society members are on the left side, and the junior society members are on the right side.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Louis C. Tuck (1851-1949) was a graduate of the American School for the Deaf in Connecticut where he studied under Laurent Clerc, and a graduate of the National Deaf-Mute College (later renamed Gallaudet College) in 1870. He was a teacher and librarian at the Minnesota School for the Deaf during 1882-1922, and served as librarian until 1933. He is shown standing in front of his house in Faribault, which is believed to have been on Fifth Street and was one block from the campus of the Minnesota School for the Deaf.
Contributing Institution:
Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf Alumni Association Museum
Members are gathered in front of Mott Hall at the Minnesota Institute for Defectives (Deaf, Blind and Feeble-Minded). The 2nd Convention of the Minnesota Association of the Deaf was held in Faribault during June 24-27, 1890. The man sitting in a chair in front on the left end is Superintendent Jonathan L. Noyes. In the front row, sitting on the steps from left to right, the second man is Anton Schroeder, the third man is Dr. James L. Smith, and the fourth man (with a little child in front of him) is Jay Cooke Howard.
Members are assembled on a chartered boat docked on the shore of Big Island in Lake Minnetonka. The Ninth Convention of the Minnesota Association of the Deaf was held in St. Paul during September 4-7, 1907. A label on the photo reads: "9th Convention Minnesota Association of the Deaf, St. Paul, Minn. Sept. 4th to 7th, 1907."