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Florence Swainson

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இந்தப் பக்கத்தை தமிழில் வாசிக்க: ஃப்ளாரென்ஸ் ஸ்வெயின்ஸன்

Florence Swainson

Florence Swainson (Died 1919) was an English missionary and educationalist who founded the Deaf School in Palayamkottai, Tirunelveli.

Birth

Florence Swainson was from England and was from a traditionally elite family.

Educational Service

Young Florence Swainson

Miss. Swainson belonged to the ZANANA Missionary Society of England. She came as a missionary through them and worked in a women’s college in Amritsar in Punjab. Due to health issues she returned to England. She came back to India to Sarah Tucker college in Palayamkottai, Tirunelveli district and taught there. She also taught tailoring to destitute women. Tailoring was an important source of livelihood for such women those days. It also liberated them. In 1895 a dumb and deaf woman joined her tailorng class and showed great eagerness in learning. Miss. Swainson took a special interest in the woman. Her success brough three more deaf-mute women joined the class. Miss. Swainson took it as a sign from God, started a school in 1897 and taught them using pictures and letters.

As more deaf-mute students came to learn, she rented a bungalow and converted it to a school for deaf-mute persons. As more and more students came to learn, the school expanded into a school for the deaf. In 1900 she bought 14 acres of land and converted it into a complete educational institute. She spent all her inheritance on that. Miss. Morgan and Rev. Charles Chittenden helped her in the endeavor. She hired teachers who were trained to teach deaf-mute students and she also trained many into teachers by their help. The school got Government recognition in 1901.

Students from Swainson's school

This school was the first of its kind in south India.[1] She helped the government of Madras to start a similar school and also another in Thiruvalla.

Death

She returned back to England in 1919 and died there at the age of 94.

Reference

Links

  1. "School for the Deaf and Dumb at Palamcottah," India’s Women and China’s Daughters XXVIII, no. 270 (December 1908): 179.


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