Trades and Training for Boys

Most schools offered courses in printing, shoemaking, and woodworking, baking, and tailoring for boys. Many graduates used the skills and trades they learned in school to enter these and other occupations. A few went on to college.

Teenage boys making new shoes with various equipment

Shoemaking and shoe repair was one of the earliest trades taught to boys at schools for deaf children. Boys made and repaired shoes for fellow students, teachers, and sometimes local residents. In addition to creating a marketable product, students learned how to use machines and tools. Some graduates opened their own shoe repair shops.

Gallaudet University Archives, Number 13143-25

Teacher demonstrating desk assembly to male students

These students from the Clarke School for the Deaf in Massachusetts are learning to make a desk.

CLARKE School for the Deaf/
Center for Oral Education

A leather shoe with a heel, and wooden shoe calipers

Kentucky School for the Deaf