yes he did he was deaf but after sometime he did not care if he was deaf it was better for him to concentrate
no deaf sports if there were who cares no deaf sports if there were who cares no deaf sports if there were who cares no deaf sports if there were who cares THE PERSON WHO WROTE THIS CLEARLY KNOWS NOTHING ABOUT THE DEAF COMMUNITY AND LIFE STYLE! There is more than enough information about the history of deaf sports. For example, the first deaf football game took pleace between England and Scotland in the 1890's. In 1945, The American Athletic Union of the Deaf was established which later was renamed to the American Athletic Association of the Deaf and finally the USA Deaf Sports Federation (renamed in 1997). The information on Deaf History could go on forever. To learn a lot of valuable information, visit USAdafsports.org. This also includes links with information about the Deaflympics!
Anne Sullivan was not deaf, she was partially blind.
No, its not even a deaf community now.
No,deaf people are not blind.There are people that are both though.
Yes, he was deaf, and he liked it that way.
he's dead now but he was deaf
Thomas Edison Was about 12 through 20 when he started to became deaf.
No, Albert Einstein was not deaf. He is known to have had hearing loss later in life, but he was not deaf.
No
Edison was deaf almost his entire life.
yes he did he was deaf but after sometime he did not care if he was deaf it was better for him to concentrate
yon Thomas Edison
He was 12 years old when he became deaf
Alexander Graham Bell
yon Thomas Edison
Thomas Edison became deaf in his early adulthood after a train conductor slapped him on the ears during a train ride, causing damage to his auditory nerves. This incident led to a gradual loss of hearing over the years, eventually resulting in near-total deafness.