Alexander Graham Bell : inventor and visionary /

Haven, Kendall F,

Alexander Graham Bell : inventor and visionary / Kendall Haven. - New York : Franklin Watts, (c)2003. - 127 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm.



Introduction -- Birth of invention -- Family forces -- Grandfather's direction -- Loss upon loss -- Boston beginnings -- Move to invention -- Watson connection -- Pressure is on -- Fires of invention -- Ahead of his time -- Supporting the world -- Life of a visionary -- Timeline -- To find out more -- Note on sources.

Explores the life of Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of numerous devices, including the telephone. Explores the life of Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of numerous devices, including the telephone. Alexander Graham Bell may be best known for the telephone, but there was more to him than just one invention. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1847, Bell was a curious child who loved music and nature. He conceived his first invention, a tub to scrape husks off wheat kernels, at the age of eleven. Besides being an inventor, Bell was also an educator. He taught music and elocution for a few years and went on to work with deaf students, helping them learn to speak. After moving to Canada with his parents in 1870, Bell went to Boston, where he continued his teaching career and his work on inventions. In 1875, Bell succeeded in his efforts to create the telephone. After his great success with the telephone, Bell continued to conduct experiments and to work on numerous inventions, including the audiometer and hydrofoil speedboats.



2003000960


Bell, Alexander Graham, 1847-1922 --Juvenile literature.


Inventors--United States--Biography--Juvenile literature.
Inventors--Juvenile literature.

TK6143 / .A449 2003 TK6143