ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL
G'day folks,
Welcome to some background on a man who changed the world, and often not for the better when I see the addiction to mobile phones. Notwithstanding, he was a smart man.
Alexander Graham Bell (1847-1922), the Scottish-born
American scientist best known as the inventor of the telephone, worked at a
school for the deaf while attempting to invent a machine that would transmit
sound by electricity. Bell was granted the first official patent for his
telephone in March 1876, though he would later face years of legal challenges
to his claim that he was its sole inventor, resulting in one of history’s
longest patent battles. Bell continued his scientific work for the rest of his
life, and used his success and wealth to establish various research centers
nationwide.
Bell owes his immortality to his having been the first to
design and patent a practical device for transmitting the human voice by means
of an electric current. But Bell always described himself simply as a “teacher
of the deaf,” and his contributions in that field were of the first order.
In 1874 the essential idea of the telephone formed in his mind. As he later explained it, “If I could make a current of electricity vary in intensity precisely as the air varies in density during the production of sound, I should be able to transmit speech telegraphically.” Two years later he applied for a patent, which was granted on March 7, 1876. On March 10, the first coherent complete sentence—the famous “Mr. Watson, come here; I want you”—was transmitted in his laboratory.
With the wealth derived from the telephone, Bell was able to assist the careers of other scientists. He also founded and helped finance the journal Science, today the premier American scientific journal, and the National Geographic Society.
While constantly engaged in scientific experiments, Bell crusaded tirelessly on behalf of the deaf, encouraging their integration into society with the help of lip-reading and other techniques. In 1890 he founded the Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf.
Clancy's comment: Helloooooooooooooooo!
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