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Alexander
Graham Bell was born in Edinburgh, Scotland
on March 3, 1847. When he was only eleven
years old, he invented a machine that could
clean wheat. Graham studied anatomy and physiology
at the University of London, but moved with
his family to Quebec, Canada in 1870.
Bell
soon moved to Boston, Massachusetts. In 1871,
he began working with deaf people and published
the system of Visible Hearing that was developed
by his father. Visible Hearing illustrated
how the tongue, lips, and throat are used
to produce vocal sounds. In 1872, Bell founded
a school for the deaf which soon became part
of Boston University.
Alexander
Graham Bell is best known for his invention
of the telephone. While trying to discover
the secret to transmitting multiple messages
on a single wire, Bell heard the sound of
a plucked string along some of the electrical
wire. One of Bell's assistants, Thomas A.
Watson was trying to reactivate a telephone
transmitter. After hearing the sound, Bell
believed he could send the sound of a human
voice over the wire. After receiving a patent
on March 7, 1876 for transmitting sound along
a single wire, he successfully transmitted
human speech on March 10th. Bell's telephone
patent was one of the most valuable patents
ever issued.
Bell
went on to invent a precursor to the modern
day air conditioner, and a device called
a "photophone"
that enabled sound to be transmitted on a beam
of light and on which today's fiber optic and
laser communication systems are based. In 1898,
Alexander Graham Bell and his son-in law took
over the National Geographic Society and built
into one of the most recognized magazines in
the world. Bell also helped found Science Magazine,
one of the most respected research journals
in the world.
Alexander
Graham Bell died August 2, 1922. On the day
of his burial, in honor of Bell, all telephone
service in the U.S. was stopped for one minute.
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