Reginald L.
Boyd
Henry Winter Syle was born in China on November 1846 to distinguished parents,
Reverend Edward Syle, D.D. and Jane Mary Winter Davis. His mother's family came from Maryland,
a family noted for political and public servants of the people. His father was also a successful
man. He was a mission for the
Church in China and once a professor of Moral Philosophy and History in the
Imperial University of Japan.
Henry W. Syle was very gifted child
that he was very eager in learning many things. "When only three and half years old the ladies of the
mission where his parents were stationed often asked him to read to them from
the Bible."
Syle became deaf when he was 6
years old by the form of a severe attack of scarlet fever. Ever since that time, he never enjoyed
a good health. He would get some
kind of sickness many times in his lifetime.
Despite of
his endurance illness, he was still a brilliant boy and managed to overcome
it. He was sent to his great aunt
in Virginia to take care of him.
Then he attended Mr. Bartlett's Family School for young Deaf-Mute
Children in 1853. A private tutor
taught his education. The
educators felt that he was too far advance for those children in Deaf
schools. He later learned to
use sign language by the Deaf children in American Asylum for the Deaf. But he preferred to be by himself with
a book. He could speak orally but
later he gave it up because his speech was more and more indistinct.
In 1863
Syle entered Trinity College and accomplished the courses with high
grades. It was only for a
year. He was ordered to
discontinue with his studies by his doctor because he had an acute bout with
inflammation of the eyes. Later he
wanted to enter Gallaudet University but was dissuaded from doing so by Thomas
Gallaudet and Richard Storrs. They
considered him to be too far advanced to benefit much from the courses offered
by the college. He wanted to go
there because his "role models" John B. Hotchkiss and Amos G. Draper
were students there. So instead he
went to Cambridge University. He
was doing very well and hoped to get scholarship funds in order to stay there
for another year or so. But again
his ill health prevented him from doing so. He returned to America in 1869. In the same year he was appointed to be a teacher at New
York School for the Deaf. While
his health was improving, he took the chance to attend Yale University. He passed many series of examinations in
order to enroll the university. The
President of the Yale University, Woolsey, delighted him. In the quote made by his daughter,
"Father used to say that the Faculty at Yale told him, "You can teach
us better than we can." In
1872 he received the degree of Master of Arts in course from Yale University,
in addition he also was a student at Columbia University. He employed various positions at the
Fanwood.
In the
year of 1872 was also special to him, He married to a Catholic Deaf woman,
Margaret Jane Flannery. Margaret
lost her hearing due to fright. It
was a common ill-defined cause of deafness during that time. Her father immediately disowned her
when she married a Protestant.
Syle was
active in St. Ann Church for the Deaf and was an assistant to the Reverend Dr.
Thomas Gallaudet. He decided to
resign as a teacher at Fanwood in order to conduct his evening Bible class. He
then moved to Philadelphia to employ for the United States Mint. He continued to provide his Church
services in the Philadelphia area and used his free time to study in theology
and received a license to be a lay reader. He conducted some services and a
Bible class at St. Stephens. He
was ordained a deacon and continued his study at Philadelphia Divinity School.
A year later he was ordained a priest.
He was not having an easy time going through these periods. Thomas Gallaudet had to persuade the
bishops that he was qualified to be a priest. He left his employment at U.S. Mint so he could concentrate
full time in his Church services.
He was one of the founders of All Souls' Church for the Deaf and was the
first vicar of the Church.
Syle
was a writer, too. He got involved
with American Annuals of the Deaf, Deaf Mute Journal, the Silent Missionary,
Empire State Association of the Deaf and Pennsylvania Society for the
Advancement of the Deaf.
Syle was also an active in an organization other than Church. He was elected the first President of
the Pennsylvania Society for the Advancement of the Deaf in 1881.
One of his
goals was to have a Home for the Aged and Infirm Deaf and Blind. He was busy with raising funds for the
Home. The Home was established in 1902
that he never saw. He died 12
years before. But his wife was dedicated to the Home until her death.
Syle was
passed away in evening of June 6, 1890.
The cause of death was by an acute attack of influenza followed by
pneumonia. A few days before his
death, he persisted and left his bed to attend a special celebration for the De
L' Epee at his Church. It made his
illness worst. And he was mourned
by thousand of Deaf, too. For he
was called " Friend, Servant, Scholar and Teacher."