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  1. The Bell Homestead National Historic Site, located in Brantford, Ontario, Canada, also known by the name of its principal structure, Melville House, was the first North American home of Professor Alexander Melville Bell and his family, including his last surviving son, scientist Alexander Graham Bell. The younger Bell conducted his earliest ...

  2. Bell Homestead - City of Brantford. Celebrating the 150th anniversary of the invention of the telephone, 1874 to 2024. Learn more. We invite you to visit the Brantford home where Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone on July 26, 1874. Here you will see how the Bell family lived and worked.

  3. Bell lived in this house in Washington, D.C., from 1881 until his death in 1905. In 1864 Melville published his first works on Visible Speech, to help the deaf both learn and improve upon their aural speech (since the profoundly deaf could themselves not hear their own aural pronunciations). [8]

  4. Here at his parents' home in July 1874, Alexander Graham Bell conceived the fundamental idea of the telephone and, in August 1876, carried out the first successful long-distance trials. The Homestead evokes the formative influence of Bell's father, an authority on the acoustics of speech, and of his mother who was deaf.

    • 94 Tutela Heights Road, Brantford, Ontario
  5. On July 26th, 1874, the young Alexander Graham Bell sat in the dale here, in a spot he called his “dreaming place”, and pondered the quest for a “speaking telegraph”. Visit Bell Homestead National Historic Site to see where the telephone was invented! Location. 94 Tutela Heights Road. Brantford, ON. WEBSITE. Plan Your Visit.

  6. Dec 17, 2007 · Alexander Melville Bell, educator, founder of the Canadian telephone industry (b at Edinburgh, Scot 1 Mar 1819; d at Washington, DC 7 Aug 1905). He was the father of Alexander Graham Bell.

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  8. Located high on the bluffs overlooking the Grand River and the town of Brantford, this was the first North American residence for the Bell family, known as “Melville House.” In 1870 this became home for Alexander and his parents and the inspiration for so much of what was to come.

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