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Helen Adams Keller b. 27 June 1880 d. 1 June 1968

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Lineage Keller
Sex Female
Full name (at birth) Helen Adams Keller
Parents

Arthur Henley Keller [Keller] b. 5 February 1836 d. 8 August 1896

Kate Adams [Adams] b. 1836 d. 1880

Reference numbers GEDCOM::hdn.ged::INDI @I2792@::Hailey C. Shannon
[1]

Events

27 June 1880 birth: Tuscumbia (Alabama), Colbert County (Alabama)

occupation: Writer and Lecturer

1904 education: Radcliffe College

1 June 1968 death: Eaton, Connecticut

burial: Washington (District of Columbia), National Cathedral

Notes

Place name error !
Image:LieuLogo60x60.jpg Warning, we tried to find one place cited on this record, and we did not find it !
  • Eaton, Connecticut (Probably : Easton (Connecticut))

Could you correct this error ?


Keller, Helen Adams (1880-1968), American author and lecturer, who, having overcome considerable physical handicaps, served as an inspiration for other afflicted people. She was born in Tuscumbia, Alabama. When 19 months old, she was stricken with an acute illness that left her deaf and blind. No method could be found to educate her until the age of seven, when she began her special education in reading and writing with Anne Mansfield Sullivan (later Macy) of the Perkins Institute for the Blind. She quickly learned to read by the Braille system and to write by means of a specially constructed typewriter. In 1890 Keller learned to speak after only one month of study. Ten years later, she was able to enter Radcliffe College, from which she graduated with honors in 1904. Keller then served on the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind. Throughout her life she worked and raised funds for the American Foundation for the Blind, and she traveled and lectured in many countries, including England, France, Italy, Egypt, South Africa, Australia, and Japan. Keller was also a pacifist and was active in socialist causes. After World War II (1939-1945), she visited wounded veterans in American hospitals and lectured in Europe on behalf of the physically handicapped. Her writings include The Story of My Life (1902), The World I Live In (1908), Out of the Dark (1913), Midstream—My Later Life (1930), Let Us Have Faith (1940), Teacher: Anne Sullivan Macy (1955), and The Open Door (1957). Her life is the subject of a motion picture, The Unconquered (1954), and a play, The Miracle Worker (1959; motion picture, 1962), by American author William Gibson.

© 1993-2003 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.

"There is no king who has not had a slave among his ancestors, and no slave who has not had a king among his" ---- Helen Keller

www.quotations.com


OneWorldTree
Ancestry.com. One World Tree (sm) [database online]. Provo, UT: MyFamily.com, Inc.

[edit] Sources

  1. OneWorldTree -

From grandparents to grandchildren

Grandparents
Mary Fairfax Moore
birth: 12 January 1796, Rockbridge County (Virginia), USA
marriage: David Keller , Knoxville (Tennessee)
death: 26 September 1875, Tuscumbia (Alabama), Colbert County (Alabama)
David Keller
birth: 1 March 1788, Frederick, Maryland, USA
occupation: Plantation Owner
marriage: Mary Fairfax Moore , Knoxville (Tennessee)
death: 2 May 1837, Colbert, Alabama, USA
Grandparents
Parents
Arthur Henley Keller
birth: 5 February 1836, Tuscumbia (Alabama), Colbert County (Alabama)
military service: Vicksburg (Mississippi), Civil War, Siege of Vicksburg
military service: Captain, Confederate States of America, Civil War
marriage: Kate Adams , Tuscumbia (Alabama), Colbert County (Alabama)
death: 8 August 1896, Tuscumbia (Alabama), Colbert County (Alabama)
Kate Adams
birth: 1836, Colbert, Alabama, USA
marriage: Arthur Henley Keller , Tuscumbia (Alabama), Colbert County (Alabama)
death: 1880, Tuscumbia, Colbert, Alabama, USA
Parents
 
== 3 ==
Helen Adams Keller
birth: 27 June 1880, Tuscumbia (Alabama), Colbert County (Alabama)
occupation: Writer and Lecturer
education: 1904, Radcliffe College
death: 1 June 1968, Eaton, Connecticut
burial: Washington (District of Columbia), National Cathedral
== 3 ==

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