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Tag Archives: Gardiner Hubbard

Features

The Genius of the Reticent Inventor – Alexander Graham Bell

Posted on September 7, 2020September 9, 2020 by Maxine Carter-Lome
Alexander Graham Bell made the first long-distance telephone call in 1892, reaching Chicago from New York photo: Stefano Bianchetti
07
Sep

by Maxine Carter-Lome, publisher   “The Boston Advertiser prints an interesting account of an experiment in carrying out a conversation by word of mouth over a telegraph wire, made by Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Watson. … In a distance of two miles, with Mr. Bell in Boston and Mr. Watson in Cambridge, conversation was […]

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Posted in Features  |  Tagged 1876, Aleck, Alexander, Alexander Graham Bell, Alexander M Bell, Anthony Pollok, Arizona Citizen, audiometer, Bell, Boston, Cambridge, Canada, Cape Breton Island, Declaration of Independence, Edinburgh, Edinburgh Scotland, Eliza, Emperor Pedro of Brazil, Gardiner Hubbard, George Eastman, George Westinghouse, Graham, Helen Keller, Hydrofoil, inventor, John Douglas Parran, long-distance telephone, Lord Kelvin, Mabel Hubbard, Mabel Hubbard Bell, metal detector, Mr. Bell, National Geographic, New York City, Nova Scotia, Philadelphia Centennial Exposition, Phone, phones, Protophone, Saul Bass, Scotland, Smithsonian Institute, speech, speech elocution, Stefano Bianchetti, Technology, Telegraph, Telephone, Thomas Watson, University of Edinburgh, Washington DC, Western Electric Company, World Fair
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