Alexander Graham BellBy age sixteen he was a piano virtuoso; by age twenty-one he was a faculty member of the University of Edinburgh; by age twenty-eight he had invented the telephone. From Scotland to Canada to the United States, Alexander Graham Bell was a visionary who contributed to essentially every technological innovation of his time. His lifelong fascination with voice and sound and his tireless efforts on behalf of the deaf and mute truly made him one of the greatest scientists and humanitarians of the nineteenth century. Leonard Everett Fisher's straightforward account of Bell's life will serve as a wonderful introduction to young readers of the impact Bell and his many inventions continue to have on daily life, more than one hundred years later. |
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Aleck Bell Alexander Graham Bell Alexander Melville Bell American Association apparatus application Art of Transmitting became Bell's claim Bell's telephone blind boat breathe bullet busy called Canada create daughter deaf-mute demonstrated his telephone device Edinburgh electric wire electrical current Elisha Gray experiments father Gardiner Greene Hubbard Garfield hearing-impaired Helen honors human voice idea ILLUSTRATIONS OF VISIBLE Improvements in Telegraphy invented the telephone Inventor Keller laboratory later lay dying learned lecture in Boston line wire lungs Mabel Massachusetts mechanical flight metal detector miles newspaper nian Nova Scotia older brother Patent Office physicist piano tuning fork present invention consists president Prize produce vowel sounds producing electrical undulations receiving end Salem Santa Claus School for Deaf science and invention Smithsonian Institution teacher Teaching telegraph tetrahedral tinkered tinued tion transmission Transmitting Vocal Sounds University vacuum jacket vibrating piano tuning Visible Speech Washington Watson Wright brothers