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  1. Mabel Gardiner Hubbard Bell [1] [2] [3] (November 25, 1857 – January 3, 1923) was an American businesswoman, and the daughter of Boston lawyer Gardiner Green Hubbard. She was the wife of Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the first practical telephone.

  2. Sep 30, 2021 · Mabel Hubbard Bell was a tireless advocate, encouraging women to educate themselves and effect changes in various areas of society, including health, home industries, women’s suffrage, children’s labor and children’s education.

  3. Mabel Hubbard Bellis remembered as far more than her husband’s companion. She was a tireless advocate, encouraging women to educate themselves and effect changes in various areas of society, including health, home industries, women’s suffrage, children’s labor and children’s education.

    • Early Life and Education
    • Marriage to Alexander Graham Bell
    • Community Involvement
    • Financier of Aeronautical Research
    • Death and Legacy

    Mabel Hubbard was born into a wealthy family in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Her mother, Gertrude Mercer McCurdy, was well educated. Her father, Gardiner Greene Hubbard, was a prominent lawyer. At the age of five, Mabel became sick with scarlet fever. As a result of her illness, she suffered hearing lossand her balance became impaired. At the time, si...

    After her return to the United States in 1873, Mabel Hubbard visited a speech teacher, Alexander Graham Bell, to see if he could help her improve her articulation. He specialized in working with deaf students using oral education. While Hubbard did not initially like her teacher, she grew to admire him and, later, to love him. In 1875, the couple w...

    In 1885, the couple, along with their two daughters, made their first summer trip to Newfoundland. During this trip, they spent time in Baddeck, Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. They loved the area, so they purchased a farmhouse on the outskirts of Baddeck. The Bells returned every summer, sometimes for as long as six months at a time. They began t...

    Mabel Hubbard Bell’s interest in commercializing her husband’s research led her to become the first financier of the aviation industry in North America. During his career as an inventor, Alexander Graham Bellexperimented with large kites. These tests eventually led to research into powered flight. He developed a strong yet light structure that was ...

    Mabel Hubbard Bell died 3 January 1923 in Chevy Chase, Maryland, five months after her husband. She was buried next to his grave on Beinn Bhreagh. Alexander Graham Bell’s aeronautical achievements are part of her legacy as his financier and supporter. Her work as a community leader and social reformer has also had a lasting impact. The Young Ladies...

  4. One of Bell’s students was Mabel Hubbard, daughter of Gardiner Greene Hubbard, a founder of the Clarke School. Mabel had become deaf at age five as a result of a near-fatal bout of scarlet fever. Bell began working with her in 1873, when she was 15 years old.

  5. Mabel G. Hubbard Bell was an influential community organizer and philanthropist. After losing her hearing as a child in Massachusetts, she continued to speak and learned to read lips with the encouragement of her parents, who advocated the oral method of education for the deaf.

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  7. Nov 25, 2023 · At the heart of that movement were two people, a young genius named Alexander Graham Bell whose life passion was teaching the deaf to speak, and a younger woman named Mabel Hubbard (1857-1923) whose brush with scarlet fever at the age of five destroyed her hearing.

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