Helen Keller Learn More in these related Britannica articles: ADDITIONAL MEDIA More About Helen Keller Additional Reading Quotes External Websites Article History Article Contributors Keep Exploring Britannica
TuscumbiaAlabamaWestportblinddeafeducationAlexander Graham BellAnne Sullivan (Macy)blindnessvenereal diseaseEdward W. Bok
Ladies’ Home Journal
The Atlantic Monthly
William Gibson
The Miracle Worker
Pulitzer Prizemotion pictureAcademy Awards
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Helen Keller
Alternative Title:
Helen Adams Keller
- What did Helen Keller accomplish?
- When did Helen Keller lose her hearing and eyesight?
- What was Helen Keller's education?
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Helen Keller
, in full Helen Adams Keller, (born June 27, 1880, Tuscumbia, Alabama, U.S.—died June 1, 1968, Westport, Connecticut), American author and educator who was blind and deaf. Her education and training represent an extraordinary accomplishment in the education of persons with these disabilities.
Keller was afflicted at the age of 19 months with an illness (possibly scarlet fever) that left her blind and deaf. She was examined by Alexander Graham Bell at the age of 6. As a result, he sent to her a 20-year-old teacher,
Anne Sullivan (Macy) from the Perkins Institution for the Blind in Boston, which Bell’s son-in-law directed. Sullivan, a remarkable teacher, remained with Keller from March 1887 until her own death in October 1936.
Within months Keller had learned to feel objects and associate them with words spelled out by finger signals on her palm, to read sentences by feeling raised words on cardboard, and to make her own sentences by arranging words in a frame. During 1888–90 she spent winters at the Perkins Institution learning Braille. Then she began a slow process of learning to speak under
Sarah Fuller of the Horace Mann School for the Deaf, also in Boston. She also learned to lip-read by placing her fingers on the lips and throat of the speaker while the words were simultaneously spelled out for her. At age 14 she enrolled in the Wright-Humason School for the Deaf in New York City, and at 16 she entered the Cambridge School for Young Ladies in Massachusetts. She won admission to Radcliffe College in 1900 and graduated cum laude in 1904.
Having developed skills never approached by any similarly disabled person, Keller began to write of blindness, a subject then taboo in women’s magazines because of the relationship of many cases to venereal disease. Edward W. Bok accepted her articles for the
Ladies’ Home Journal
, and other major magazines—The Century, McClure’s, and
The Atlantic Monthly
—followed suit.
She wrote of her life in several books, including The Story of My Life (1903), Optimism (1903), The World I Live In (1908), My Religion (1927), Helen Keller’s Journal (1938), and The Open Door (1957). In 1913 she began lecturing (with the aid of an interpreter), primarily on behalf of the American Foundation for the Blind, for which she later established a $2 million endowment fund, and her lecture tours took her several times around the world. She cofounded the American Civil Liberties Union with American civil rights activist Roger Nash Baldwin and others in 1920. Her efforts to improve treatment of the deaf and the blind were influential in removing the disabled from asylums. She also prompted the organization of commissions for the blind in 30 states by 1937.
Keller’s childhood training with Anne Sullivan was depicted in William Gibson’s play
The Miracle Worker
(1959), which won the Pulitzer Prize in 1960 and was subsequently made into a motion picture (1962) that won two Academy Awards.
Learn More in these related Britannica articles:
Anne Sullivan Macy
…New York), American teacher of Helen Keller, widely recognized for her achievement in educating to a high level a person without sight, hearing, or normal speech.…
Helen Keller International
…then recruited author and lecturer Helen Keller, who had been deaf and blind since childhood. The Kesslers and Keller worked together, forming an American branch of the Permanent Relief War Fund called the Permanent Blind Relief War Fund for Soldiers and Sailors of the Allies, which was incorporated in New…
The Miracle Worker
…that presented the life of Helen Keller and her teacher Annie (or Anne) Sullivan; it earned Anne Bancroft and Patty Duke Academy Awards for best actress and supporting actress, respectively.…
Akita
…to the United States by Helen Keller in 1937, a puppy having been presented to her as a gift during a tour of Japan. Akitas were admitted into the show classifications of the American Kennel Club (AKC) in 1973. According to AKC standards, males must be 26 to 28 inches…
blindness
Blindness, transient or permanent inability to see any light at all (total blindness) or to retain any useful vision despite attempts at vision enhancement (functional blindness). Less-severe levels of vision impairment have been categorized, ranging from near-normal vision to various degrees of low vision to near-blindness, depending on the visual…
ADDITIONAL MEDIA
More About Helen Keller
4 references found in Britannica articles
Assorted References
association with Macy- In Anne Sullivan Macy
- In Anne Sullivan Macy
history Helen Keller International- In Helen Keller International
- In Helen Keller International
“Miracle Worker, The”- In The Miracle Worker
- In The Miracle Worker
ownership of Akita- In Akita
- In Akita
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Additional Reading
Quotes
External Websites
- National Women's History Museum - Biography of Helen Keller
- HistoryNet - Biography of Helen Keller
- Spartacus Educational - Biography of Helen Keller
- American Foundation for the Blind - Anne Sullivan Macy: Miracle Worker
- Helen Keller - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- Helen Keller - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
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