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A tetrahedral kit designed by Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, built at Baddeek,Nova Scotia, and containing 3960 tetrahedral cells, all covered with red silk and driven with the same motor as the Silver Dart. J. A. D. McCurdy, aviator
Google Doodle pada hari Selasa 26 Januari 2016 menampilkan sebuah perayaan ulang tahun ke 90 sejak televisi mekanik diperkenalkan pada masyarakat dunia, namun tahukah kita siap penemu televisi tersebut? mari kita simak bagaimana Google memberikan apresiasi pada sebuah peristiwa hari...
berita24.com/siapakah-penemu-televisi-google-doodle-hari-...
"Mr. Watson—Come here—I want to see you." Surprisingly, these words were not uttered by Sherlock Holmes while solving yet another mystery. They were in fact the first words to ever be spoken on the patented telephone. 140 years ago on 10. March 1876, Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant Thomas A. Watson managed to transmit sound from one room to another – three days after Bell had secured the patent for the telephone. Controversy still surrounds the invention and patenting of the telephone to this day. The invention of the telephone is swell and all, BUT would we even have thought about needing it without our ability to hear? I think not! That is of course why we here present you with the true heroes of the telephone: the bones of the human ear. The middle ear contains three tiny bones known as the ossicles: malleus, incus, and stapes. They are also referred to as the hammer, anvil, and stirrup, respectively because of their similar shapes. For some reason great controversy also still surrounds the invention of the human ear ;) #medmus #ucph #bones #AlexanderGrahamBell #telephone #history Photo by our conservator @medicalmuseionconservator --via Instagram ift.tt/1nyWjRg
This was a good day for visiting museums and going to
a Celtic Colours concert, as this was a rainy day. The stop in the charming town of Baddeck was fascinating for us and historically important to us, because we didn't know a lot about Alexander Graham Bell's contributions, his interesting life, and his connection to Canada. We ended the day in Sydney on a perfect note by attending a performance, one of the Celtic Colours shows, tickets we were lucky enough to secure the night before - we got the last two seats! We were treated to performances by local and international artists.
Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site. Opened in 1954 as the Alexander Graham Bell Museum. he 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_0278
Silver Dart (1909) airplane (from below), Alexander Graham Bell Museum, Baddeck, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, July 2022
The Bell Homestead National Historic Site, located in Brantford, Ontario, features the first North American home of Professor Alexander Melville Bell and his family, and is the site where his son, scientist Alexander Graham Bell, invented the telephone in the July 1874. The 10-acre site features the Melville House, which has been restored to appear as in the 1870s.
The site also later added the Henderson Home, Canada's first telephone company office opened in 1877 and a predecessor of Bell Canada, which was moved to the museum from its original location in downtown Brantford.
The museum is operated by Bell Homestead Committee and is owned by the Parks & Recreation Department of the City of Brantford. It has been designated a National Historic Site of Canada (1910).
This was a good day for visiting museums and going to
a Celtic Colours concert, as this was a rainy day. The stop in the charming town of Baddeck was fascinating for us and historically important to us, because we didn't know a lot about Alexander Graham Bell's contributions, his interesting life, and his connection to Canada. We ended the day in Sydney on a perfect note by attending a performance, one of the Celtic Colours shows, tickets we were lucky enough to secure the night before - we got the last two seats! We were treated to performances by local and international artists.
Day 221 of an Unknown Number
"Image 221"
If you have never used one of these, I probably don't know you. For those unfamiliar with our subject, it was a prop used in films up until the 1980s. Please notice the absence of an apostrophe. I used a two-light arrangement for this image. The key light is a strip bank at camera-left, and it supplies all the nice highlights in the telephonic device and stool. Then there is a snooted speedlight lighting the white (yes, white) background. I just wanted a little separation from the background blackness. I'm working on creating a clip which would allow me to wear the phone on my hip. I'm just worried the elastic cord will crimp the wrong way. Perhaps I'll just continue using my cell phone. Thanks for stopping by!!
#phone #telephone #alexandergrahambell #antique #retro #canon5dmarkIII #paulcbuffinc #paulcbuffeinstein #rotaryphone #pocketwizard #canon580exII #canon100macro #communications
Working scale replica of the 1909 aeroplane that flew the first manned flight in Canada (and the British Commonwealth) on nearby Bras d'Or Lake.
Correspondence from George M. Whipple, secretary of the Essex Institute, to Abner C. ("A. C.") Goodell Jr., president of the Essex Institute, dated February 13, (18)77 and relating to "Prof Bell" (Alexander Graham Bell),
Salem, Massachusetts
"Feb 13/77
Dear Sir
Will you please send me the "note of thanks" to Prof Bell worded as you want it to appear in the record, and to be sent to him.
Yrs trul,
Geo. M. Whipple,
Secy. E.I."
Front: flic.kr/p/2o4UGVN
Back: flic.kr/p/2o4ZPre
Citation: Nelson Dionne Salem History Collection, Salem State University Archives and Special Collections, Salem, Massachusetts