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Location of the first long distance telephone call from Brantford, Ontario. August 10, 1876
Paris, Ontario
Edited Library of Congress photograph of Alexander Graham Bell (far right) and his assistants watching one of his tetrahedral kites.
Yes, they had, back in the late 19th century, a working shower there.
Bell Homestead; Brantford, Ontario.
“Nunca andes por el camino trazado,
porque él sólo conduce adonde ya fueron otros.”
– Alexander Graham Bell (1847 - 1922)
Científico, logopeda e inventor del teléfono
Más en www.lasendadelguerrero.es
It means "beautiful mountain" in Scottish Gaelic. This is the final home (and resting place) of Alexander Graham Bell. It is still privately owned by the Bell family and used as a summer home.
Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site. Opened in 1954 as the Alexander Graham Bell Museum. The museum features a basement display of Bell's aerial and nautical inventions he tested at Baddeck. The triangular design of the building reminds one of Bell's tetrahedral kites. 559 Chebucto Street.
Canadian Register of Historic Places
DSC_0294
"Washington is no place in which to carry out inventions." -- Alexander Graham Bell
Freedom Plaza, Washington, DC
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Blogged by Quotes Hunter ("20 Alexander Graham Bell Quotes That Will Construct Your Views" by Naina Emmanuel - November 18, 2013) at quoteshunter.com/20-alexander-graham-bells-constructive-q...
History:
Captioning of television presentations is achieved by transmitting digital data superimposed on the normal FM sound signal by modulation of an ultrasonic subcarrier and receiving the digital data at a viewer's television receiver by picking up the ultrasonic signal from the television receiver's loudspeaker; the received digital data being demodulated and applied to the television receiver as readable alphanumeric captions. Patent Number 4310854.
A statue of Alexander Graham Bell and his wife Mabel Bell, at the Baddeck harbour, Cape Breton Island.
Alexander Graham Bell artifacts.
Artifacts recovered from Alexander Graham Bell’s Laboratory in Boston, now on display just off the lobby in the Verizon Building, Boston. ( moved to new location )
The Alexander Graham Bell Boston lab is long gone, but Verizon has them on display. There is also an impressive 360 degree mural depicting communications history in the lobby, though photography is forbidden in the lobby, they have a free color reproduction for those interested. Bell was very inventive but many folks think the phone was the invention of Elisha Gray, or Antonio Meucci but you knew that.
This collection is now located @
JFK Buildings at City Hall Plaza
(Opposite 1 Center Plaza)
1 Center Plaza, Boston, MA 02108