Helen Adams Keller (June 27, 1880 – June 1, 1968) was an
American author, political
activist, and lecturer. She was
the first deaf-blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts
degree. The story of how Keller's
teacher, Anne Sullivan, broke
through the isolation imposed by a near complete lack of language, allowing the
girl to blossom as she learned to communicate, has become widely known through
the dramatic depictions of the play and film The
Miracle Worker. Her birthplace in West Tuscumbia, Alabama, is now a museum and
sponsors an annual "Helen Keller Day". Her birthday on June 27 is
commemorated as Helen Keller Day in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania and was authorized at the federal
level by presidential proclamation by President Jimmy Carter in 1980, the 100th anniversary of her
birth.
A
prolific author, Keller was well-traveled and outspoken in her convictions. A
member of the Socialist Party of
America and the Industrial
Workers of the World, she campaigned for women's
suffrage, labor rights, socialism, antimilitarism, and other similar
causes. She was inducted into the Alabama
Women's Hall of Fame in 1971 and was one of twelve inaugural
inductees to the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame on June 8, 2015.
Helen Adams Keller was born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Her family lived on a homestead, Ivy Green that Helen's grandfather had built decades
earlier. She had two younger
siblings, Mildred Campbell and Phillip Brooks Keller, and two older
half-brothers from her father's prior marriage, James and William Simpson Keller.
Her father, Arthur H. Keller, spent many years as an editor for the Tuscumbia North Alabamian, and had served as a captain for the Confederate Army. Her paternal grandmother was the second cousin of Robert E. Lee. Her mother, Kate Adams, was the daughter of Charles W. Adams, a Confederate general. Though originally from Massachusetts, Charles
Adams also fought for the Confederate Army during the American Civil War,
earning the rank of colonel (and acting brigadier-general). Her paternal
lineage was traced to Casper Keller, a native of Switzerland. One of Helen's Swiss ancestors was the first teacher for the
deaf in Zurich. Keller reflected on this coincidence in her first
autobiography, stating "that 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 was born with the ability to see and hear. At 19
months old, she contracted an illness described by doctors as "an acute
congestion of the stomach and the brain", which might have been scarlet fever or meningitis. The illness left her
both deaf and blind. At that time, she was able to communicate somewhat with
Martha Washington, the six-year-old
daughter of the family cook, who understood her signs; by the age of seven,
Keller had more than 60 home signs to communicate with
her family.
In 1886, Keller's mother, inspired by an account in Charles Dickens' American Notes of the successful education of another deaf
and blind woman, Laura Bridgman, dispatched young Helen, accompanied by her father, to seek out
physician J. Julian Chisolm, an eye, ear, nose, and throat specialist in Baltimore, for advice. Chisholm referred the Kellers to Alexander Graham Bell, who was working with deaf children at the
time. Bell advised them to contact the Perkins Institute for the Blind, the school where Bridgman had been educated,
which was then located in South Boston.
Michael Anagnos, the school's director, asked 20-year-old former student Anne Sullivan, herself visually impaired, to become
Keller's instructor. It was the beginning of a 49-year-long relationship during
which Sullivan evolved into Keller's governess and eventually her companion.
Anne Sullivan arrived at Keller's house in March 1887, and
immediately began to teach Helen to communicate by spelling words into her
hand, beginning with "d-o-l-l" for the doll that she had brought
Keller as a present. Keller was frustrated, at first, because she did not
understand that every object had a word uniquely identifying it. In fact, when
Sullivan was trying to teach Keller the word for "mug", Keller became
so frustrated she broke the mug. Keller's big breakthrough in communication came the next month,
when she realized that the motions her teacher was making on the palm of her
hand, while running cool water over her other hand, symbolized the idea of
"water"; she then nearly exhausted Sullivan demanding the names of
all the other familiar objects in her world.
Starting in May 1888, Keller attended the Perkins Institute for
the Blind. In 1894, Helen
Keller and Anne Sullivan moved to New York to attend the Wright-Humason School
for the Deaf, and to learn from Sarah Fuller at the Horace Mann School for the Deaf. In 1896, they returned to Massachusetts, and
Keller entered The Cambridge School for Young Ladies before gaining admittance, in 1900, to Radcliffe College, where she lived in Briggs Hall, South House. Her admirer, Mark Twain, had introduced her to Standard Oil magnate Henry Huttleston Rogers, who, with his wife Abbie, paid for her education. In 1904, at
the age of 24, Keller graduated from Radcliffe, becoming the first deaf blind
person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree. She maintained a correspondence with
the Austrian philosopher and pedagogue Wilhelm Jerusalem,
who was one of the first to discover her literary talent.
Determined to communicate with others as conventionally as
possible, Keller learned to speak, and spent much of her life giving speeches
and lectures. She learned to "hear" people's speech by reading their
lips with her hands—her sense of touch had become extremely subtle. She became
proficient at using braille and reading sign language with her hands as well. Shortly before World War I, with the
assistance of the Zoellner Quartet she determined that by placing her fingertips on a resonant
tabletop she could experience music played close by.
Keller suffered a series of
strokes in 1961 and spent the last years of her life at her home.
On
September 14, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, one of
the United States' two highest civilian honors. In 1965 she was elected to the National Women's Hall of Fame at the New York World's Fair.
Keller
devoted much of her later life to raising funds for the American Foundation for the Blind. She
died in her sleep on June 1, 1968, at her home, Arcan Ridge, located in Easton, Connecticut, a few weeks short
of her eighty-eighth birthday. A service was held in her honor at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., her body was
cremated and her ashes were placed there next to her constant companions, Anne
Sullivan and Polly Thomson. She was buried at the Washington National
Cathedral.
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