The George M. Teegarden Papers
Scope and Contents
The collection contains several narratives relating to the boyhood days of Mr. Teegarden and the pioneer type move to Iowa. Several are written by Mr. Teegarden and one by Alice May Teegarden. Only brief mention is made of his admission to the Iowa School for the Deaf at Iowa City.
The only papers relating to his position for 48 years as a teacher in the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf are a Class Register, 1879 -1880; a class book, not dated and a speech to a teacher’s meeting. Several other speeches exist in the collection, but the occasion and date on which they were delivered is not specified.
The greatest strength of the collection lies in his published works of poems and children’s stories of which many original manuscripts were saved, which date from 1874-1936. Some were published under his pen name of T. G. Arden.
The correspondence in the collection date from 1887-1936. Included are letters from The Rev. John G. Brown, Frederick H. Hughes, Harley D. Drake, A.C. Manning, A.D. Bryant, Enoch Currier, Edward Allen Fay, Edward M. Gallaudet, Dudley W. George, Frank C. Holloway, John B. Hotchkiss, James H. Logan, J.A. McIlvaine, A.W. Mann, Andrew Mellon, Roy J. Stewart and Oliver J. Whildin. These letters are arranged alphabetically.
He was a reporter for “The Pittsburgh News” and “The Deaf Mute’s Journal” for many years, of which documentation in the Papers are lacking.
He was a member of the Pennsylvania Society for the Advancement of the Deaf, the National Fraternal Society of the Deaf, the National Association of the Deaf, the Duquesne Bicycle Club and was an active participant in the Edward Miner Gallaudet Memorial Fund. Only a few items of scattered dates are represented: P.S.A.D., 1890-1908; Duquesne Bicycle Club, 1893-1899: Edward Miner Gallaudet Memorial Fund, 1924-1931.
Nineteen address-memo-diary books dating from 1898-1932 are in the collection. The entries for the diary portions of the books are not consistent. Days, months and even years have been missed. A large portion of the diaries dwell on the problems of the household.
The collection contains 14 items relating to the Rev. John G. Brown, founder and President of the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf, Turtle Creek.
Letters from Mr. and Mrs. Teegarden to their only child, a daughter, Alice May, date from 1893-1936 and are arranged chronologically. The letters do not document significant milestones in his life, but describe ordinary day to day events.
Mr. Teegarden saved memorabilia relating to birthdays, trips and events which were important in his life. There are ten items relating to the George M. Teegarden Award for Poetry at Gallaudet College, of which the information is sketchy.
Alice May Teegarden initially arranged and labeled the collection in 1959, prior to giving it to the Edward Miner Gallaudet Memorial Library.
Dates
- Creation: 1874 - 1936
Biographical / Historical
Biographical Sketch
1852 George M. Teegarden was born March 11 in Green County, Pennsylvania.
1863 At the age of 11 he became deaf from an attack of spinal meningitis.
1868 Five years later Teegarden entered the Iowa School for the Deaf, Iowa City.
1871 Teegarden graduated from the Iowa School for the Deaf.
1871 The same year he entered the National Deaf Mute College, Washington, D.C. (Now known as Gallaudet University).
1876 In four years, plus preparatory classes, Teegarden graduated from the National Deaf Mute College with his B.A. degree on April 26.
1876 Teegarden became the first teacher at the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf at its new location in Turtle Creek.
1880 The Raindrop was published at the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf, of which G.M. Teegarden was the author of many of the stories.
1884 The Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf was relocated again, this time to Edgewood Park.
1885 George M. Teegarden married Celia J. Maul, June 30.
1886 The Teegardens’ daughter, Alice May, was born on May 19.
1890 Teegarden started the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf paper, “The Holiday Gazette.”
1891 The following year the name of the school paper changed to “The Gazette” and printing began on a monthly basis.
1894 Reading Lessons in Natural History, Edgewood Park, School for the Deaf, was published.
1896 Stories Old and New, Edgewood Park, Pa., was published.
1915 This year In the Silent Hours was published. (Publisher not named.)
1924 Teegarden retired from the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf.
1929 Vagrant Verse was published by The Fanwood Press, New York.
1936 Personal and Holiday Poems was published. (Publisher not named.)
1936 George M. Teegarden died on November 14.
1936 A citation and cash award was established in memory of Mr. Teegarden at the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf.
1959 The athletic field at the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf was named the Teegarden Athletic Field on May 30.
Extent
4.5 Linear Feet (9 document cases)
Language of Materials
English
Abstract
Papers of deaf author, journalist, and teacher George M. Teegarden.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Donated to Gallaudet Library by Alice May Teegarden, 1959.
- Title
- The George M. Teegarden Papers
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Kelly, Carielyn
- Date
- Original creation August 27, 1984. Last update January 10, 2006. ArchivesSpace version created January 31, 2023.
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Gallaudet University Archives Repository