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  1. Sarah Fuller (February 15, 1836 – August 1, 1927) was an American educator . Biography. Fuller was born in Weston, Massachusetts to Harvey and Celynda (Fiske) Fuller, and was educated at West Newton English and Classical School in Massachusetts. After graduating in 1855, she taught in Newton and Boston.

  2. Apr 24, 2024 · Sarah Fuller (born February 15, 1836, Weston, Massachusetts, U.S.—died August 1, 1927, Newton Lower Falls, Massachusetts) was an American educator, an early and powerful advocate of teaching deaf children to speak rather than to sign.

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  3. Mar 16, 2018 · Last updated: March 16, 2018. Sarah Fuller was born in Weston, Massachusetts, in 1836. She worked as a teacher in Newton and Boston. Early in her teaching career, she became interested in deaf education. By her early 30s, she was taking classes at the Clarke School for the Deaf.

  4. Fuller, Sarah (1836–1927) American educator of the deaf. Born on February 15, 1836, in Weston, Massachusetts; died in Newton Lower Falls, Massachusetts, on August 1, 1927; youngest of six children of Hervey (a farmer) and Celynda (Fiske) Fuller; attended local schools in Newton Lower Falls, Massachusetts; graduated from the Allan English and ...

  5. Sarah A. Fuller. Influential medievalist and educator, considered an expert on fourteenth-century French music and medieval music theory. For several decades, her The European Musical Heritage: 800-1750 (1987; Revised, 2004) was used in music history courses across the country.

  6. Background. She was born in Weston, Massachusetts to Harvey and Celynda (Fiske) Fuller, and was educated at Allan English and Classical School, located in West Newton. Career. After graduating in 1855, she taught in Newton and Boston.

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  8. Jul 2, 2017 · Sarah was a passionate advocate of this practice as well as the promotion of education for children who are deaf starting at the earliest age possible. In 1890, Sarah Fuller applied the methods she learned and developed from Bell, giving her first speech lessons to none other than Helen Keller.

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