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Helen Keller met President Grover Cleveland in 1887 at the age of seven. She was invited to the White House after gaining national attention for her remarkable progress in communicating despite being deaf and blind.
Helen Keller's mother was a house wife and stay at home mother.
Helen Keller's house in Tuscumbia, Alabama was a simple farmhouse with a large wrap-around porch. It had a well-tended garden and was surrounded by trees. The house also had a water pump where Helen first learned the word "water" in sign language.
Helen Keller never married and did not have any children. She dedicated her life to advocating for people with disabilities and promoting social causes.
Helen Keller wrote books. She was also a lector and enjoyed it quite much. One of her favorite snacks was fudge. Helen died in her house in Connecticut from a heart attack at age 87.
Helen Keller learned to communicate through sign language, braille, and speech. She also learned to read, write, and engage in public speaking, becoming an advocate for individuals with disabilities. Additionally, she acquired skills in music and sewing.
Helen Keller's childhood home, Ivy Green, burned down in 1919 when she was attending college. She eventually oversaw the rebuilding of the house to restore its original structure.
Helen Keller did planned to elope with a man named Peter Fagan, but in the end he never showed to pick her up from her house. She wasn't really heartbroken, she just knew that she might've never achieved her dreams. =D
No, the Kellers were middle class comfortable. Mr. Keller was a newspaper editor in his town in Alabama. The original house in Tuscumbia is still there.
Helen Keller met John F. Kennedy in 1961 at the White House. Kennedy awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Barrack Obama
Helen Keller was never married. She lived with a female companion named Anne Sullivan who taught kept her house clean and acted as her secretary.