Alexander Graham Bell was one of the primary inventors of the telephone, did important work in communication for the deaf and held more than 18 patents.
1877. His wife, who was deaf, had been one of his pupils. They had four children, two girls, Elsie and Marian, and two sons who died in infancy. Photo credit: Unattributed. (Photographer). (1885). Alexander Graham Bell with his wife Mabel...
deathFocuses on the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell. Date and place of birth; Education; Invention of a phonetic and visual way of teaching the deaf to speak; Bell's receipt of patents for his work on a multiple telegraph; Transmission of the first long distance voice ...
Gallaudet, his investigations into the heritability of deafness, his role in directing Helen Keller's father to the Perkins Institution, his correspondence with Helen Keller, his interest in heavier-than-air flight, his service on the Board of Governors of the Clarke School, and his death in ...
Blake, Alexander Graham Bell, Emily Dickinson, Charlie Chaplin, and Ludwig Wittgenstein, not to mention Albert Einstein and Howard Hughes. If we could gain even the barest glimpse into how all those people came to be the way they were, it might just help the rest of us to be more ...
deathFocuses on the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell. Date and place of birth; Education; Invention of a phonetic and visual way of teaching the deaf to speak; Bell's receipt of patents for his work on a multiple telegraph; Transmission of the first long distance voice ...
“George” – the front-runner before the announcement, according to many UK bookmakers – was the name of Queen Elizabeth’s father, King George VI, who reigned from 1936 until his death in 1952. He assumed the throne on the abdication of his brother, Edward VIII. His life was depicted...