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  2. Alexander Graham Bell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Graham_Bell

    The 1939 film The Story of Alexander Graham Bell was based on his life and works. [233] The 1965 BBC miniseries Alexander Graham Bell starring Alec McCowen and Francesca Annis. The 1992 film The Sound and the Silence was a TV film. Biography aired an episode Alexander Graham Bell: Voice of Invention on August 6, 1996.

  3. Bell Homestead National Historic Site - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Homestead_National...

    The Bell Homestead National Historic Site, located in Brantford, Ontario, Canada, also known by the name of its principal structure, Melville House, was the first North American home of Professor Alexander Melville Bell and his family, including his last surviving son, scientist Alexander Graham Bell.

  4. Volta Laboratory and Bureau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volta_Laboratory_and_Bureau

    The Volta's research was later absorbed into the Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf (now also known as the 'AG Bell') upon its creation when the Volta Bureau merged with the AAPTSD in 1908, with Bell's financial support. [46] The AAPTSD was renamed as the Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf in 1956.

  5. Bell Memorial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Memorial

    The Bell Memorial (also known as the Bell Monument or Telephone Monument) is a memorial designed by Walter Seymour Allward to commemorate the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell at the Bell Homestead National Historic Site, in Brantford, Ontario, Canada.

  6. Catherine MacKenzie - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catherine_MacKenzie

    [2] [4] In 1928 she published a biography of Bell entitled Alexander Graham Bell: The Man Who Contracted Space. [ 4 ] By 1929, [ 5 ] MacKenzie had moved to New York City where she initially found work writing a series of newspaper and magazine articles about her home province of Nova Scotia , which were paid for by the provincial government. [ 2 ]

  7. Thomas A. Watson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_A._Watson

    Watson in his later years, holding Bell's original telephone. Born in Salem, Massachusetts, [1] United States, Watson was a bookkeeper and a carpenter before he found a job more to his liking in the Charles Williams machine shop in Boston in 1872. [2] He was then hired by Alexander Graham Bell, who was then a professor at Boston University.

  8. Edwin S. Grosvenor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edwin_S._Grosvenor

    Grosvenor is the author, with Morgan Wesson, of Alexander Graham Bell: The Life and Times of the Man Who Invented the Telephone (Harry N Abrams, 1997), [18] a biography of his great-grandfather. He also authored Try it!: the Alexander Graham Bell Science Activity Kit, published by the National Geographic Society in 1992. [19]

  9. Charles Williams Jr. House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Williams_Jr._House

    Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Watson experimented with the telephone in Williams' shop, and it was there that they first heard indistinct sounds transmitted on June 2, 1875. The first permanent residential telephone service in the world was installed at this house in 1877, connecting Williams' home with his shop on Court Street in Boston ...