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Louise Treadwell TracyMrs. Tracy was born in New Castle, Pennsylvania on July 31st. 1896. In 1915, she attended Lake Erie College and graduated with honors. During the next several years she went back and forth between New York City and her hometown where she participated in several theatrical plays. After her mother died, she played with a stock company in Chicago, and toured as the lead in "Nothing but the Truth." Louise made it to Broadway in "The Pigeon." In early March 1923, Louise joined the Leonard Wood Players in White Plains, New York, which engaged her as the leading lady. She arrived on the same day as Spencer Tracy, who was also joining the company. They met on the station platform. Six weeks later, on September 12, they were married in Cincinnati, Ohio. On June 26, 1924, John Tracy, Louise and Spencer's first son, was born. Ten months later Mrs. Tracy discovered her son was deaf. Early in 1926 Mrs. Tracy met a deaf woman at a bridge party, who could lipread so well that Mrs. Tracy was encouraged that John might be able to have a normal life, in spite of this deafness. She took her son to a well-known specialist who confirmed a diagnosis of nerve deafness and told her that even though there was nothing medical intervention could do, John could learn how to talk and lipread and do anything a hearing person can do. It was in her job to make sure he did it. With new hope, Mrs. Tracy began working with John, using material from different schools. In 1927, John spoke aloud "Mama" for the first time. Meanwhile Spencer Tracy was making his Broadway debut in "Yellow". Then Louise and Spencer went back to Lima, Ohio. She was still torn between the theater and teaching John to talk. They had a nurse with them, and Louise tried to keep up with the daily lipreading lessons. Then on the train from Lima to New York, Louise decided that her job was teaching John. By June of 1927, John was enrolled in the Wright Oral School. At three years of age, he was the youngest child they had ever accepted. In the summer of 1930, John and Mrs. Tracy went to Hollywood while Spencer was filming. On the train back to New York, John was struck with infantile paralysis. Two years later, Susie Tracy was born and by March 1936 the family moved to the home in Encino, California where they lived 19 years.
She was honored with many awards during the 1950's, including the 1951 Hearing Advancement Award from the Hearing Foundation, the Testimonial of Merit/Woman of the Year award from La Sertoma International in 1953, and the Sixth Annual Award of the Save the Children Foundation for 1955. Mrs. Tracy was also being lauded in academic circles. In quick succession, she was granted honorary degrees from Northwestern University, University of Southern California, Lake Eire College and MacMurray College. And on the national level, in 1956 she was appointed to a four-year term as a member of the National Advisory Council on Vocational Rehabilitation.
Gallaudet College, the only college for the deaf in the United States, honored her with a Doctor of Letters degree in 1966.
Mrs. Tracy died at 87 after a lengthy illness. One of her former fund-raising associates said at her funeral: "No one who knew her will forget her. Strength and love like hers goes on. It can never die".
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