Helen reveals these details in Chapter 3 of The Story of My Life. Her mother had read Charles Dickens’ book American Notes. She had absorbed the author’s description of a visit to the Perkins Institution in Boston, where he met a blind and deaf woman named Laura Bridgman. Unfortunately, Samuel Gridley Howe, who had been the head of Perkins when Laura Bridgman was there, had since died. But Helen’s parents knew that specialized help was indeed possible. When she was about six years old, they took Helen to see Dr. Chisholm in Baltimore. He recommended Alexander Graham Bell in Washington, D.C. Bell in turn told them to write a letter to Mr. Anagnos at the Perkins Institution. By the summer of 1886, Anagnos said a teacher had been found. He would send Anne Mansfield Sullivan to Helen’s house in March 1887. The Kellers had finally tapped into the right assistive network.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Why is the fact that the Americans are helping the Russians important?
In the late author Tom Clancy’s first novel, The Hunt for Red October, the assistance rendered to the Russians by the United States is impor...
-
Lionel Wallace is the subject of most of "The Door in the Wall" by H.G. Wells. The narrator, Redmond, tells about Wallace's li...
-
In the late author Tom Clancy’s first novel, The Hunt for Red October, the assistance rendered to the Russians by the United States is impor...
-
Resourceful: Phileas Fogg doesn't let unexpected obstacles deter him. For example, when the railroad tracks all of a sudden end in India...
-
Friar Lawrence plays a significant role in Romeo and Juliet's fate and is responsible not only for secretly marrying the two lovers but ...
-
The poem contrasts the nighttime, imaginative world of a child with his daytime, prosaic world. In the first stanza, the child, on going to ...
-
Use transformation to illustrate the graph of the function $\displaystyle f(x) = \left\{ \begin{array}{c} -x & \rm{if} & x \\ e^...
-
Abraham and Moses are fundamental figures in both Judaism and Christianity. They each played an integral role in the development of these re...
No comments:
Post a Comment