Beverly School for the Deaf
The Children's Center for Communication/Beverly School for the Deaf is a school, established in 1876, for students from birth to age twenty-two who are Deaf, Hard-of-Hearing, or hearing with complex communication needs by providing language that is visually accessible via American Sign Language, written English, speech, and AAC/Assistive Technology.
History
CCCBSD was founded in 1876 by William Benjamin Swett in Beverly, Massachusetts. Mr. Swett was a deaf man with a deaf daughter and saw a need for educational and vocational services for deaf children and young adults of Boston's North Shore. In 1879 with a small legacy and the help of his close friend, the Reverend Dr. Thomas Gallaudet, a parcel of land was purchased overlooking the tidal waters of the Bass River in Beverly.The school was initially run by the Swett family with Mr. Swett as the Superintendent, and Mrs. Swett as the Matron and 30 students.. Their two daughters, Nellie and Lucy, became teachers and John Bowden, their son-in-law, became the foreman of the Industrial Department. The original name was "The New England Industrial School for the Education and Instruction of Deaf Mutes", usually referred to as the New England Industrial School for Deaf Mutes. Students were taught to talk and taught lip reading, the recommended method of teaching deaf children at the time. They also learned trades such as farming, chair-caning, carpentry, and homemaking. The school's name changed in 1922 from the New England Industrial School for Deaf Mutes to Beverly School for the Deaf and was registered as non-profit.
In the 1970s the school expanded to teach children who have learning and developmental disabilities. In 2004, services were extended to students with autism, developmental delays and other disabilities and communication challenges. In 2007, the school transitioned from its 15-year use of Signed Exact English to American Sign Language, and the name was officially changed to The Children's Center for Communication with Beverly School for the Deaf.