Welcome to Olof Hanson Web Exhibition
Welcome to the very first virtual museum exhibition of the Gallaudet University Museum!
The Olof Hanson, Conspicuous Leader, 1862-1933 exhibition was featured at the Weyerhaeuser Family Art Gallery and Exhibition Hall in the I. King Jordan Student Academic Center at Gallaudet University in the fall of 2009 and replaced during the summer of 2011 with the current exhibition, Making a Difference: Deaf Peace Corps Volunteers. It is now possible to virtually experience the Olof Hanson exhibition.
Be sure to use your mouse to drag over images, as you do, other images or texts will appear.
Please note that the images are copyrighted, please obtain permission to use them.
To enhance your virtual museum experience, you are welcome to download the PDF format of the Olof Hanson exhibition guide.
Please note that the images are copyrighted; contact museum@gallaudet.edu for permission for use or questions.


















![Secretary James Garfield’s response to Olof Hanson’s letter, December 1908. “Dear Sir: By reference from the President, I have your letter of November 18, relative to the admission of deaf mutes to the Civil Service examinations. The President has today signed the following order: “Deaf mutes may be admitted to examination for all places in the classified civil service of the United States, whose duties, in the opinion of the Civil Service Commission, they are capable of performing.” Very truly, yours, [Signed] James Randolph Garfield Secretary”](Images/Musuem/wall4.6r.jpg)






![As an unmarried man of 26, Hanson presented a controversial stance on deaf marriages. The emerging eugenics movement supported by Alexander Graham Bell and his colleagues argued that deaf marriages created more deaf children. Certain deaf leaders defended people’s right to marry among themselves. Hanson wrote an article titled, “The Tendency Among the Deaf to Exclusive Association With One Another” and published it in American Annals of the Deaf, Vol. 33 No. 1, January 1888. The article questioned whether it might be better for deaf people to have a hearing spouse and Hanson’s words expressed some commonly held assumptions. “One result of the tendency to exclusiveness [of the Deaf community] is the frequent marriage of the deaf with the deaf. Much might be said on this question. It is self-evident that unions should be avoided which tend to transmit the infirmity, as indicated by Professor Bell.” “What I contend for is not a separation of the deaf from one another, but that they should have a more extended intercourse with hearing people, in order to become better citizens and more enlightened men and women.”](Images/Musuem/wall5.3r.jpg)







![“No one can measure the breadth and permanence of [Hanson’s] influence, for death does not end a life; its sway will go on radiating the lasting effects of his missionary labors in behalf of others.” Anonymous, obituary newspaper clip, Gallaudet Archives.](Images/Musuem/ObitQuoter.jpg)
![[Banner Image]](Images/Musuem/Olof_Banner1.jpg)
