Bob Rumball

Reverend Robert L. "Bob" Rumball (born 1929) is a pastor and advocate for the Deaf.

After studying at University of Toronto, he began his career as a football player, playing at the varsity level before playing professionally for the Canadian Football League in the position of half-back for the Ottawa Rough Riders. After four seasons in Ottawa, he was traded to Toronto where he played one season for the Argonauts.[1]

During this time, he attended Northern Baptist Seminary in Chicago in the off seasons, and preached on Sundays at various churches. He was introduced to Deaf culture while preaching at the Evangelical Church of the Deaf, located at the time in downtown Toronto, and began a lifetime of advocacy. He learned sign language in order to communicate with Toronto’s Deaf population, and give their needs a voice.[2]

Realizing they needed a place of their own, Rumball purchased land in 1960 to establish the Ontario Camp of the Deaf in 1960,[3] and subsequently opened the Ontario Community Centre for the Deaf (now called The Bob Rumball Centre for the Deaf) in 1979.[1]

The Bob Rumball Centre for the Deaf houses numerous programs and services, including the Evangelical Church of the Deaf, a preschool, a long-term care home, and the Ontario Association for the Deaf. The Centre is currently managed by his son, Derek Rumball.[2]

Rumball’s work has been recognized with many honours, including the Order of Ontario, the Order of Canada, and appointment as a Citizenship Court Judge.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "About Reverend Rumball". Bob Rumball Centre for the Deaf. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Hall, Joseph (13 November 2009). "Ministering to the deaf for half a century". Toronto Star. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  3. Goddard, John (16 July 2010). "Nothing but sign language here". Toronto Star. Retrieved 30 November 2012.

External links