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34 results filtered with: Hearing Loss
  • Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, New York: with an elaborate border. Line engraving by J.D. Smillie after Davis.
  • A vicar using sign language to the congregation at a service at a deaf and dumb church. Wood engraving after A.S. Hartick (?).
  • A man attempting to alert a deaf farmer using an ear trumpet as to the plight of his horses and cart. Coloured etching.
  • Christ cures a deaf man with his hands. Woodcut.
  • The Deaf and Dumb institution, Cabra, Ireland. Wood engraving by W.E. Hodgkin after C. Geoghegan.
  • A stockbroker feigning deafness to avoid paying the man who claims to have restored his hearing. Coloured etching, 1786.
  • Sordomuti institute, Bologna: bird's eye view of the San Giuseppe courtyard. Process print.
  • Asylum for the deaf and dumb, Camberwell. Engraving, 1834.
  • Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, New York. Coloured wood engraving.
  • Hannah Thatcher, deaf and dumb since birth, taught to hear and speak by W. Wright. Stipple engraving by J. Rogers, 1823, after Miss R.E. Drummond.
  • Queen Victoria using sign language to talk to Mrs B. Tuffield, a deaf mute woman. Process print after H. Ash.
  • A chair designed for use by the deaf, incorporating a hearing device. Engraving with etching, 1770/1830?.
  • Deaf actors using sign language perform a play about Don Guzman to an audience in St Saviour's church hall, London. Wood engraving by G. Durand, 1877.
  • Hannah Thatcher, deaf and dumb since birth, taught to hear and speak by W. Wright. Stipple engraving by J. Rogers, 1823, after Miss R.E. Drummond.
  • The death-bed of John Wesley, 1791. Process print after J. Sartain after M. Claxton.
  • Hands showing the alphabet of sign language. Wood engraving.
  • A stockbroker feigning deafness to avoid paying the man who claims to have restored his hearing. Coloured etching, 1786.
  • Deaf and dumb people from the Hackney Mission to the Deaf and Dumb performing plays, sign language, and portraits of staff at the institution. Wood engraving by J. Swain, 1884, after H. Morehen.
  • Bailey Prison, Lying-in Hospital, Salford, Lancashire. Etching by J. Davies, 1829, after Harwood.
  • Abbot de L'Epée, the founder of deaf and dumb education in France, above the French sign language alphabet. Coloured lithograph.
  • Hands showing the alphabet of sign language. Wood engraving.
  • Two men performing a show to an audience at a public house, using sign language. Wood engraving, 1875.
  • A deaf man being made fun of and shouted at by his friends. Drypoint by A. Casanova y Estorach, 1877.
  • Asylum for the deaf and dumb, Camberwell. Engraving by I.C. Varrall after himself, 1822.
  • A woman using sign language. Coloured aquatint by W.T. Annis, 1819, after J. Northcote.
  • New York Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, New York City. Coloured wood engraving.
  • Hands showing the alphabet of sign language. Wood engraving.
  • Hands showing the French sign language alphabet. Wood engraving.
  • A Christmas entertainment, presented in sign language for the deaf and dumb, at the Hanover Square rooms, London. Wood engraving, 1865.
  • Entertainment in sign language for the deaf and dumb at the Hanover Square rooms, London. Wood engraving.