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Kentucky School for the Deaf

Kentucky School for the Deaf
Jacobs Hall, Kentucky School for the Deaf, South Third Street, Danville (Boyle County, Kentucky).jpg
Jacobs Hall, A National Historic Landmark in 1987
Location
303 S. 2nd St., Danville, Kentucky
Information
Type Public
Established April 10, 1823
Principal Will Begley
Faculty 45
Grades P-12
Enrollment 140
Color(s) Green and white
Mascot Colonels
Website
Jacobs Hall, Kentucky School for the Deaf
Kentucky School for the Deaf is located in Kentucky
Kentucky School for the Deaf
Kentucky School for the Deaf is located in the US
Kentucky School for the Deaf
Location Danville, Kentucky
Coordinates 37°38′29″N 84°46′18″W / 37.64139°N 84.77167°W / 37.64139; -84.77167Coordinates: 37°38′29″N 84°46′18″W / 37.64139°N 84.77167°W / 37.64139; -84.77167
Built 1857
Architect Thomas Lewinski, John McMurtry
NRHP Reference # 66000354
Added to NRHP October 15, 1966

The Kentucky School for the Deaf (KSD), located in Danville, Kentucky, United States, is a school that provides education to deaf and hard-of-hearing children from elementary through high school levels.

KSD was established as the Kentucky Asylum for the Tuition of the Deaf and Dumb on April 10, 1823. It was the first state-supported school of its kind in the United States and the first school for the deaf west of the Allegheny Mountains. The deaf were a special concern of General Elias Barbee, a Kentucky state senator, whose daughter was deaf. In 1822 Barbee and John Rowan wrote legislation authorizing the creation of the school. On December 7, 1822 it was signed into law by Kentucky Governor John Adair. With the help of Henry Clay, KSD received two federal land grants in 1826 and 1836. This land in Florida and Arkansas was eventually sold to finance the construction of school facilities.

In the early years it was thought that the Kentucky school might be able to meet the educational needs of all deaf people in the southern and western United States. Pupils from all the southern states except Florida, and from as far away as Montana, attended KSD. Eventually, other states established their own schools for deaf students.

The Centre College Board of Trustees operated the school until 1870. It was then governed by its own board of commissioners. Since 1960 the Kentucky Board of Education and Department of Education have governed the school.

Many of the officers and teachers at KSD have had long tenures. George M. McClure was associated with the school for eighty years as both pupil and teacher. The school has had fourteen superintendents since its inception. The Rev. John Rice Kerr, the first superintendent, and John Adamson Jacobs, the third superintendent, are credited with nurturing the school from its infancy. Jacobs began his work in 1825, became superintendent in 1835, and held that office until his death in 1869.

KSD lies on 166 acres (67 ha) near the center of Danville. Buildings on the campus are listed below. It has been proposed that the campus be reduced to 50 acres (20 ha), demolishing or selling several of the buildings.

A task force was established in 2004 to create a master plan for KSD. They recommended:


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