Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
Gallaudet

Gates Chained Shut: Gallaudet Students Shut Down the Only Deaf University in America

DCcivil unrestadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On March 7, 1988, Gallaudet University students chained shut the campus gates and padlocked them after the university's Board of Trustees selected a hearing president over two Deaf finalists, triggering the landmark Deaf President Now protest that shut campus for a week. The protest succeeded: Elisabeth Zinser resigned, Board chair Jane Spilman stepped down, and I. King Jordan became the first Deaf president of Gallaudet on March 13, 1988, reshaping the Deaf rights movement and contributing to the later passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Alerts
3
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Gallaudet University
Private R2 · DC
Physical gate blockade and ASL/interpreter-mediated announcements (pre-mass-notification era)
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

3 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTother
Approximate reconstruction128 chars
The campus is closed. The gates are locked. We are here to demand a Deaf president NOW. No one enters until our demands are met.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The gate blockade on the morning of March 7 was the triggering act; students drove cars to each entrance and deflated the tires to prevent removal, then secured the gates with chains
Because Gallaudet's primary community is Deaf and hard of hearing, all campus-wide communication occurred through ASL, written notices, interpreters at the gates, and press conferences with sign language interpretation
The community's communication infrastructure meant the 'alert' mechanism was inherently visual and in-person, anticipating modern accessible-notification principles by decades
UPDATEother
Approximate reconstruction341 chars
We have four demands: One, a Deaf president must be selected immediately. Two, Jane Spilman must resign from the Board of Trustees. Three, the Board must be reconstituted with a 51-percent Deaf majority. Four, there will be no reprisals against any student or staff involved in this protest. We will not leave until all four demands are met.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

By March 8, four student leaders had emerged: Bridgetta Bourne-Firl, Gerald 'Jerry' Covell, Greg Hlibok, and Tim Rarus
The four demands became a template for later disability-rights advocacy and are cited in the historical record as the first such structured demand list from a Deaf campus community
Press conferences were conducted in ASL with spoken-English interpretation for media, reversing the usual accommodation direction
ALL CLEARother
Approximate reconstruction168 chars
We have won. All four demands have been met. I. King Jordan will be our president. The campus is open. We are no longer in protest. We thank everyone who stood with us.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

On the evening of March 13, after Zinser's public resignation announcement and Spilman's resignation, student leaders declared the protest over and opened the campus gates
The resolution came after I. King Jordan and board member Phil Bravin, who succeeded Spilman as chair, pledged to work with students to reconstitute the board's Deaf majority
The Deaf President Now victory directly influenced the 1988 Telecommunications Accessibility Enhancement Act and, later, the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
Context

Background

The Deaf President Now protest that paralyzed Gallaudet University's Washington, D.C. campus from March 7 to March 13, 1988, was triggered by the Board of Trustees' announcement on March 6 that it had selected Elisabeth Zinser, a hearing candidate with no experience in Deaf education, as the seventh president of the world's only liberal-arts university for Deaf and hard-of-hearing students. Students reacted overnight, and by dawn on March 7 had driven cars to each campus gate and deflated the tires to block removal, then secured the gates with chains. An estimated 2,500 people, including students, alumni, faculty, and international supporters, marched on the U.S. Capitol that week. Gallaudet's official historical account records that the protest succeeded entirely: Zinser resigned on March 11, Spilman resigned March 13, I. King Jordan was installed as the first Deaf president, the Board was restructured to include a Deaf majority, and no students faced consequences. Because Gallaudet's community communicates primarily in American Sign Language, the entire emergency communication infrastructure during the shutdown was visual and tactile: ASL announcements at barricaded gates, written notices, interpreter-mediated press conferences. The protest's success influenced passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and established a model for disability-community advocacy that resonates to the present day.
Analysis

Key Findings

Students physically closed every campus gate by driving cars to each entrance, deflating tires, and securing gates with chains on March 7, 1988
Because Gallaudet's community is primarily Deaf, all campus emergency communication during the week-long shutdown occurred via ASL, written notices, and interpreter-mediated announcements rather than audio systems
All four student demands were met in full: Zinser resigned, Spilman resigned, the Board acquired a Deaf majority, and I. King Jordan was named the first Deaf president
The protest directly shaped the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and remains one of the most successful disability-rights actions in U.S. history
Outcome
All four student demands were met. Elisabeth Zinser resigned as president-designate. Board chair Jane Spilman resigned. The Board was reconstituted with a 51-percent Deaf membership. I. King Jordan was installed as Gallaudet's first Deaf president on March 13, 1988, and no students faced reprisals.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Source
  2. Official
  3. Official
  4. Source
Tags
civil-unrestprotestdisability-rightsdeafcampus-shutdownDChistoricpre-cleryasl1988hbcu-adjacentamerican-disabilities-act
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion