Alexander Graham Bell
(1847-1922), American inventor and teacher of the deaf, most famous for his work
on the telephone.
Bell was born on March 3, 1847, in Edinburgh, Scotland,
and educated at the universities of Edinburgh and London. He immigrated to
Canada in 1870 and to the United States in 1871. In the United States he began
teaching deaf-mutes, publicizing the system called visible speech. The system,
which was developed by his father, the Scottish educator Alexander Melville
Bell, shows how the lips, tongue, and throat are used in the articulation of
sound. In 1872 Bell founded a school to train teachers of the deaf in Boston,
Massachusetts. The school subsequently became part of Boston University, where
Bell was appointed professor of vocal physiology. He became a naturalized U.S.
citizen in 1882.
Since the age of 18, Bell had been working on the idea of
transmitting speech. In 1874, while working on a multiple telegraph, he
developed the basic ideas of the telephone. His experiments with his assistant
Thomas Watson finally proved successful on March 10, 1876, when he transmitted:
“Watson, come here; I want you.” Subsequent demonstrations, particularly one at
the 1876 Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, introduced the
telephone to the world and led to the organization of the Bell Telephone Company
in 1877.
In 1880 France bestowed on Bell the Volta Prize, worth
50,000 francs, for his invention. With this money he founded the Volta
Laboratory in Washington, D.C., where, in that same year, he and his associates
invented the photophone, which transmits speech by light rays. Other inventions
include the audiometer, used to measure acuity in hearing; the induction
balance, used to locate metal objects in human bodies; and the first wax
recording cylinder, introduced in 1886. The cylinder, together with the flat wax
disc, formed the basis of the modern phonograph.
Bell was one of the cofounders of the National Geographic
Society, and he served as its president from 1896 to 1904. He also helped to
establish the journal Science by financing it from 1883-1894.
After 1895 Bell's interest turned mostly to aeronautics.
Many of his inventions in this area were first tested near his summer home at
Baddeck on Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, Canada. His study of flight began
with the construction of large kites, and in 1907 he devised a kite capable of
carrying a person. With a group of associates, including the American inventor
and aviator Glenn Hammond Curtiss, Bell developed the aileron, a movable section
of an airplane wing that controls roll. They also developed the tricycle landing
gear, which first permitted takeoff and landing on a flying field. Applying the
principles of aeronautics to marine propulsion, his group started work on
hydrofoil boats, which travel above the water at high speeds. His final
full-sized “hydrodrome,” developed in 1917, reached speeds in excess of 113 km/h
(70 mph) and for many years was the fastest boat in the world.
Bell's continuing studies on the causes and heredity of
deafness led to experiments in eugenics, including sheep breeding, and to his
book Duration of Life and Conditions Associated with Longevity (1918). He
died on August 2, 1922, at Baddeck, where a museum containing many of his
original inventions is maintained by the Canadian government.
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