Alexander Graham Bell honors and tributes


[image:Alexander Graham Bell (crater)|Bell.jpg|thumb|275px| ]
Alexander Graham Bell was an inventor, scientist, and engineer who received numerous honors and tributes during his life, and new awards were subsequently named for him posthumously.

Major awards and tributes

Among those tributes:
image:Alexander Graham Bell Brantford Monument 0.98.jpg|thumb|700px|center|The Bell Telephone Memorial, commemorating the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell. The monument, paid by public subscription and sculpted by W.S. Allward, was dedicated by the Governor General of Canada, Victor Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire with Dr. Bell in The Telephone City's Alexander Graham Bell Gardens in 1917. Included on the main tableau are figures representing Man, the inventor, Inspiration whispering to Man, his power to transmit sound through space, as well as Knowledge, Joy, and Sorrow. |alt=A majestic, broad monument with figures mounted on pedestals to its left and right sides. Along the main portion of the monument are five figures mounted on a broad casting, including a man reclining, plus four floating classical female figures representing Inspiration, Knowledge, Joy, and Sorrow.

Other citations, honours and awards

  • Bell received numerous other awards and honorary degrees during his life. Among them were:
  • *Doctor of Philosophy degree from Illinois College in recognition for his work for the deaf. Note that this may be an erroneous item, as the College's website only lists a single degree to Bell ––his LL.D in 1896. ;
  • * Doctor of Laws degree from Amherst College;
  • Bell additionally received the Karl Koenig von Württemberg gold medal;
  • At the age of eighteen, Bell was nominated for membership in the scholarly London Philological Society, by linguist and mathematician Alexander Ellis, on the basis of a study Bell had written on overtones. Ellis also lent him a work by German scientist Hermann von Helmholtz, with Bell's incorrect translation of that work becoming the basis of his enduring research into transmitting speech telephonic-ally ;
  • Bell was also nominated as a Resident Member of the Boston Society of Natural History.

Other posthumous tributes

Honorary names of schools, organizations, awards, and placenames

A number of schools, institutes, organizations, academic scholarships, awards, and places have been named in honour of Bell. A number of historic sites and other marks also commemorate both him and the first telephone company buildings. Among them are:

International

Canada

  • The City of Brantford, Ontario, dedicated a major monument to Bell in 1917, the Bell Telephone Memorial within its Alexander Graham Bell Gardens, its inscription reading: "This Monument, the work of Walter S. Allward, R.C.A., Sculptor, was placed here through International subscription by the Bell Telephone Memorial Association to mark the invention of the Telephone at Brantford by Alexander Graham Bell in 1874". Additionally a large monument of a seated Bell is found at the entrance to Brantford's newer Bell Telephone Company of Canada building;
  • The for Masters and Doctoral studies in engineering and the natural sciences is awarded annually by Canada's Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Ottawa, Ontario ;
  • The Canadian Acoustical Association annually awards the Alexander Graham Bell Student Prize in Speech Communication and Behavioral Acoustics for graduate research, named in tribute of Bell's lifelong research of speech and deafness;
  • , a part of Cape Breton University in Nova Scotia -and searchable on ;
  • , maintained by Parks Canada, which incorporates the Alexander Graham Bell Museum, in Baddeck, Nova Scotia. The site is close to Bell's original Beinn Bhreagh estate. The National Historic Site in Baddeck, in conjunction with the Bell Museum are open to visitation;
  • , also known as Melville House, overlooking Brantford, Ontario and the Grand River, was Bell's first home in North America. Both the Bell Homestead and the historic Bell Telephone Company Building are open to visitors;
  • maintains two historic buildings related to the extended Bell family: the first being their private residence and the other one being The Henderson Home, Canada's first telephone company building of the nascent Bell Telephone Company of Canada. The Henderson Home was originally built on Sheridan Street within the city of Brantford, Ontario, and was then carefully relocated in 1969 to its current site at the historic Bell Homestead site. Both the Bell Homestead and the Bell Telephone Company Building are open to visitation;
  • The, featuring a broad neoclassical monument depicting mankind's ability to communicate across the globe instantly;
  • The Alexander Graham Bell Museum, which is part of the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site in Baddeck, Nova Scotia. Numerous museum artifacts were contributed by Bell's daughters;
  • The Alexander Graham Bell Club, Canada's oldest continuing women's club, which grew out of a social organization started at Beinn Bhreagh, Nova Scotia, by Mabel Bell, Alexander's wife. Bell's granddaughter and former secretary, [Mabel H. Grosvenor|Dr. Mabel Gardiner Hubbard|Mabel Harlakenden Grosvenor], was its former Honorary President, until her death in 2006. The club, originally created as The Young Ladies Of Baddeck Club, was renamed in 1922 after Bell's death, and after Mabel Bell declined the use of her name.Graham Bell-Victoria School, a public school in Brantford, ON ;Alexander Graham Bell Public School, in Ajax, ON;Alexander Graham Bell High School, in Halifax, Nova Scotia;Graham Bell Court, in Milton, Ontario;Alexander Graham Bell Drive in Sydney, Nova Scotia, which intersects two other historically named streets associated with Bell: Douglas McCurdy Drive and Silver Dart Way, adjacent to J.A. Douglas McCurdy Sydney Airport;rue Graham-Bell, in the city of Boucherville; and in Quebec City; in Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville; in Saguenay plus also in Longueuil, Quebec;
  • The, on Big Baddeck Road, Baddeck, Nova Scotia, B0E 1B0.
  • A statue of Alexander and Mabel Bell by Peter Buston was unveiled on the waterfront in Baddeck, Nova Scotia, in 2008.

China

Bei'er Road, in the Longgang district of Shenzhen City. Note that the name was using pinyin notation and not the original surname.

France

rue Graham Bell, in the city of Metz, Lorraine; and in La Roche-sur-Yon in western France; and in the town of Mérignac, Gironde, Aquitaine; plus also in the community of Noisy-le-Grand, Marne-la-Vallée, Paris;avenue Alexander Graham Bell, in Parc Léonard de Vinci, Marne La Vallee, Paris.

India

Alexander Graham Bell Road, in Malabar Hill, Mumbai.

Germany

Alexander Graham Bell Straße, in Bonn;Graham-Bell Weg, in Garbsen, Hannover;Graham-Bell Straße, in Augsburg.

Mexico

Graham Bell Street, in Residencial Los Robles, Apodaca.

New Zealand

Graham Bell Avenue, in Mount Roskill, Auckland.

Russia

South Africa

Graham Bell Street, in Despatch, Eastern Cape, a small town near Port Elizabeth.

Switzerland

Graham Bell Strasse, in Reinach.

Spain

Graham Bell Street, in Campanillas, Málaga.

The Netherlands

Graham Bell Straat, in Amsterdam;Graham Bell Straat, in Heerlen.

United Kingdom

  • Alexander Graham Bell Birthplace, at a house on 14 South Charlotte Street in Edinburgh, Scotland, where there's an inscribed stone beside the doorway of his birth home, and additionally one within its entrance way;
  • The Alexander Graham Bell Building, at the University of Edinburgh, which was named after him;
  • The Alexander Graham Bell Apartment, an apartment-hotel also in Edinburgh.

United States

Alexander Graham Bell in popular culture

In fiction

  • Eric Walters' The Hydrofoil Mystery sets a novel in Alexander Graham Bell's workshops, casting the hydrofoil as a new weapon of war being readied for use against German U-boats during the First World War.

In music

  • In the early 1970s, the UK rock group The Sweet recorded a tribute to Bell and the telephone, suitably titled "Alexander Graham Bell". The song gives a fictional account of the invention, in which Bell devises the telephone so he can talk to his girlfriend who lives on the other side of the United States. The song reached the top 40 in the UK and went on to sell over one million recordings worldwide.
  • Another musical tribute to Bell, Alexander Graham Bell was written by the British songwriter and guitarist Richard Thompson. The chorus reminds the listener that "of course there was the telephone, he'd be famous for that alone, but there's 50 other things as well from Alexander Graham Bell".

In film and TV

The Story of Alexander Graham Bell, Don Ameche playing Bell, ;Biography –Alexander Graham Bell, A&E DVD biography based on historical footage and still pictures of Bell, ;The Sound and the Silence: The Story of Alexander Graham Bell with John Bach as Bell; Vanessa Vaughan and Elizabeth Quinn portrayed Bell's fiancé and wife respectively; Canada / New Zealand / Ireland ;Animated Hero Classics: Alexander Graham Bell.

Corporate namesakes

The "Bell" trademark has been used, and is still in use, with a variety of telephone companies in North America and around the world, including: