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Jack R. Gannon: An Appreciation
Renowned historian Jack Randle Gannon, ’59 (name sign: G on the forehead then down to the chin), beloved husband, father, and grandfather died on March 14, 2022. He was 85 years old.
Jack dedicated much of his life to helping people understand what it means to be Deaf. An advocate, educator, curator, and writer, he connected people and ideas. He inspired students, challenged accepted practices, and pushed for positive change. The impact of his contributions is immeasurable.
Born in an Ozark mountain home without running water near West Plains, Missouri on November 23, 1936, Jack became deaf at age eight from spinal meningitis. In 1946, he found a welcoming community at the Missouri School for the Deaf in Fulton. Jack thrived at school where his teachers, often deaf themselves, pushed him to learn and grow. While his own father had to leave school after the third grade, Jack became the first in his family to earn a college degree, graduating with a Bachelor of Science degree in education from Gallaudet College in 1959.
Jack’s student years at Gallaudet were formative. He honed his writing and editing skills at the Buff and Blue student newspaper, as well as his love of football while playing center for the Bison. It was also during his college years that he met Rosalyn Faye Lee, the love of his life. They married five days after graduation, and together they began their working lives at the Nebraska School for the Deaf in Omaha.
Jack returned to Gallaudet in 1968 to work as the first-ever Director of Alumni and Public Relations. In this role, he also served as Executive Secretary of the Gallaudet College Alumni Association. During his 38-year career at Gallaudet, Jack served under five presidents, most notably under the university’s first deaf president, I. King Jordan. Following the 1988 Deaf President Now movement, Dr. Jordan appointed Jack to the position of Special Assistant to the President for Advocacy. Jack became a frequent national and international presenter on Deaf history, advocacy, and leadership.
With Jack Gannon’s recent passing, privateand the larger deaf community lost a true giant, and Linda and I lost a dear friend. Jack was one of a kind. He was always Jack, no matter the situation or the people with whom he was interacting. Everyone will agree that with Jack, what you see is what you get. Always. I first met Jack when I was an undergraduate student and he was returning to Gallaudet as a new employee. He spoke at an Alpha Sigma Pi Fraternity banquet, and I can still vividly remember his talk. The title was “The Torch is Yours,” and it was profound and excellently delivered. I had been deaf for only a few years at that time, and to see a deaf man deliver such a powerful message had a profound impact on me. In the years after that, he and I would often talk about the torch and the passing thereof. When I became president, I asked Jack to join my team and we worked together for many years. I recall that soon after he began working in the president’s office, amid all of the excitement following the DPN revolution, he and I were meeting and I said to him, “Well, Jack, it’s true. The torch is indeed ours.” He laughed that Jack Gannon laugh and we shook hands firmly. One of Jack’s interesting sayings was to sign “good luck” and say “good lucky!” Many of us borrowed that from him and I still frequently tell people “good lucky.” Each time I do this, I think of Jack. Linda and I were fortunate to become good friends with Jack and Rosalyn. It helped that our children were nearly the same age and attended the same high school. Jack and I frequently talked about the way that our children were growing and becoming independent. When the children went off to college and life after college, Jack and Rosalyn were able to realize a life-long dream and purchase their retirement farm. The farm became a non-stop project for the two of them, and it was always a pleasure to see the pride with which they would point to a recent accomplishment and improvement. We were fortunate to have been able to know Jack so well. He will leave a significant emptiness now that he is gone.
With Jack Gannon’s recent passing, privateand the larger deaf community lost a true giant, and Linda and I lost a dear friend. Jack was one of a kind. He was always Jack, no matter the situation or the people with whom he was interacting. Everyone will agree that with Jack, what you see is what you get. Always. I first met Jack when I was an undergraduate student and he was returning to Gallaudet as a new employee. He spoke at an Alpha Sigma Pi Fraternity banquet, and I can still vividly remember his talk. The title was “The Torch is Yours,” and it was profound and excellently delivered. I had been deaf for only a few years at that time, and to see a deaf man deliver such a powerful message had a profound impact on me. In the years after that, he and I would often talk about the torch and the passing thereof.
An avid woodcarver, Jack Gannon’s love of Gallaudet overlapped with his interest in woodcarving. He carved the model for the Alice Cogswell Award, a hand in an “A” shape. Defying his fear of heights, he climbed the steps high up the Tower Clock of iconic Chapel Hall to find a board that, together with wood from the American School for the Deaf and a 16th-century French church, was used to make the Gallaudet mace. Finally, Jack and his son Jeff salvaged wood being removed from College Hall during a renovation. With Jack’s boost, Jeff took a “dumpster dive,” and together they rescued treasured wood that is now the mantel in the Gannon home.
With a printer’s eye for text, Jack Gannon edited without mercy for himself and those who asked for his feedback. He labored over each sentence and argued over every comma. He could be at the same time empathetic and tenacious when it came to publications.
Jack Gannon saw the power of the past to deal with the present and guide the future. He painstakingly researched and documented national and international Deaf history, writing detailed and oft-cited books that are now in homes, libraries, and schools throughout the world. These books include:
Deaf Heritage, A Narrative History of Deaf America, National Association of the Deaf, Silver Spring, Maryland, 1981; a subsequent edition was published by privatePress
The Week the World Heard Gallaudet, privatePress, Â鶹´«Ă˝¸ßÇĺ, Washington, D.C., 1989
Through Deaf Eyes: A Photographic History of an American Community, co-authored with Douglas C. Baynton and Jean Lindquist Bergey, privatePress, 2007
World Federation of the Deaf: A History, National Association of the Deaf, 2011
October 4, 2024