Alexander Graham Bell
Alexander
Graham Bell was born in Scotland. His mother, who was deaf,
was a musician and a painter of portraits. His father, who taught deaf
people how to speak, invented "Visible Speech". This was a code which
showed how the tongue, lips, and throat were positioned to make speech
sounds.
Graham, or "Aleck", as his family called him, was interested in working
with the deaf throughout his life.
He only attended school for five years; from the time he was 10 until
he was 14, but he never stopped learning. He read the books in his
grandfather's library and studied tutorials .
When he was a teen-ager, he and his brother Melly used the voice box of
a dead sheep to make a speaking machine that cried, "Mama!" This
created even more interest in human speech and how it worked.
When he was in his early 20's, his two brothers died of tuberculosis . Bell himself had the disease and his
father
moved the family to Canada looking for a better climate in which to
live.
Bell recovered from the disease.
Two years later he went to Boston to open a school for teachers of the
deaf and then became a professor at Boston University. It was at this
time that he met Mabel Hubbard, one of his students who was 10 years
younger than he. Mabel had become deaf at the age of four due to
scarlet fever. Five years later they were married.
At the wedding ceremony he gave her a gift of all but 10 shares of the
stock in the newly formed company called Bell Telephone Company. They
had two daughters and two sons. Their sons both died at a young age.
Thomas Watson became an associate of Bell. He made parts and built
models of Bell's inventions.
One day while they were working Bell accidently heard the sound of a
plucked reed coming over the telegraph
wire. Watson had been tuning the metal reeds in the next room. Bell
drew up a plan for the
telephone
and they continued to experiment.
The next day he transmitted the famous words, "Mr. Watson, come here. I
want you!" A few months later on Feb. 14, 1876, he applied for a patent
on his telephone.
He knew he would have to work quickly to get the patent
because other people were also trying to make an invention
to transmit the human voice. Elisha Gray claims he too invented the telephone,
but Bell got to the patent office an hour or so before he did. It is
said that Antonio Meucci also succeeded with the invention
before Bell.
Because Bell had the patent, he had the right to be the only one to
produce telephones in the U.S. for the next 19 years.
He showed the invention to Queen Victoria of England and she wanted
lines to connect her castles.
By 1917, nearly all of the United State had telephone service.
He continued to invent other things. He developed a method of making
phonograph
records on a wax disc. He made an iron breathing lung, and a device for
locating icebergs at sea. He experimented with sheep. He was interested
in kites
that could lift a man, and he invented a hydrofoil
which set a world speed record of over 70 miles per hour.
He along with others started the National Geographic Society and he
served as its president for several years.
He became a U.S. citizen, but he died in Canada at the age of 75.
Biography at
gardenofpraise.com