Alexander Graham Bell had four children, two of which died in infancy.
Yes. Alexander Bell was married to a woman named Mabel Gardiner Hubbard, and the couple had several children together. Bell lived from 1847 to 1922.
Yes, two of Alexander Graham Bell's four children were deaf. His two sons, Edward and Robert, were both deaf. Bell's work with the deaf, including the invention of the telephone, was influenced by his desire to help his deaf wife and children communicate.
Yes, he had four children: Elsie May Bell (1878-1964), Marian Hubbard Bell (1880-1962) and two sons who died in infancy.
Two sons who died in infancy and two daughters. Parents ... In 1888
Yes, Alexander Graham Bell had 2 brothers. They both died in Scotland.
Alexander Graham Bell did not get any rewards for inventing the telephone.
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== == Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site Museum in Baddeck, Nova Scotia. Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. Alexander Graham Bell Institute. Alexander Graham Bell School, in the north side of Chicago. (K-8) Alexander Graham Bell Residence Hall at Rochester Institute of Technology.
Alexander Graham Bell's wife and mother were both deaf. He was interested in and performed research involving speech and hearing devices and this led to his development of devices designed to transmit sound. Eventually he invented and was granted the first patent for the telephone. Ironically, he considered the invention of the telephone a distraction from his real work of assisting the deaf.
Yes, Alexander Graham Bell had four daughters with his wife Mabel Hubbard Bell. They were Elsie, Marian, Daisy, and Beatrice.