Fay, Edward Allen

ID
0990
Nationality
American
Occupation
Teacher
Author
Summary
Hearing. B.A., 1862, and M.A., 1865, from the University of Michigan; Ph.D., 1881 from Johns Hopkins University. Instructor at the New York Institution for the deaf 1862-1866. Third professor to be appointed to the Gallaudet College faculty, 1865-1885, and vice-president of the College 1885-1920. Editor of the American Annals of the Deaf, 1870-1920. The best-known of his several writings is his pioneering genealogical study, Marriages of the Deaf in America (1898). Died at Washington, DC. Fay House on the Gallaudet University campus was originally named for him, but later this was altered to honor his deaf wife Helen Bradshaw Fay instead. His eldest son was Allan Bradshaw Fay (q.v.).
References
Gallaudet Encyclopedia, vol.1, p.426-428; Biographical Dictionary of American Educators, v.1 p.451; Gallaudet Almanac, p.235.
Dates
23 November 1843-14 July 1923