Helen Keller touching the branch of a tree Helen Keller, Activist

  • Born: 27 June 1880
  • Birthplace: Tuscumbia, Alabama
  • Died: 1 June 1968 (natural causes)
  • Best Known As: The blind and deaf woman who became a famous activist

Helen Keller was, for a time, the most famous handicapped person in the world. A severe fever at age 19 months left Keller blind and deaf and barely able to communicate. At age six Keller met Anne Sullivan (later Anne Sullivan Macy), the tutor who taught Keller the alphabet and thereby opened up the world to her. Keller became an excellent student and eventually attended Radcliffe College, where she graduated with honors in 1904. While at Radcliffe she wrote an autobiography, The Story of My Life (1902), which made her famous. (Her many later books included The World I Live In (1908), Out of the Dark (1913), and 1938′s Helen Keller’s Journal.) In later life Keller became an activist and lecturer, sometimes in support of the blind and deaf, and sometimes for causes including Socialism and women’s rights. She also founded and promoted the American Foundation for the Blind. During her lifetime Keller was regarded as one of America’s most inspirational figures.

Keller’s story was told in a 1957 television play, The Miracle Worker, which later became a Broadway play (1959) and then a 1962 film starring Anne Bancroft as Sullivan and Patty Duke as Keller; both Bancroft and Duke won Academy Awards for their work… Keller’s image appears on the quarter-dollar coin honoring Alabama, first releaed in 2003. According to the U.S. Mint, the coin is the first U.S. coin to feature braille.

Source: answers.com

Download “Helen Keller – The Story of My Life” http://styven.googlepages.com/Helen_Keller_TheStoryofMyLife.zip



Reader's Comments

  1. Anonymous | September 5th, 2007 at 7:29 AM

    Helen Keller
    Quotes:

    “I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something; And because I cannot do everything I will not refuse to do the something that I can do.”

    “We may have found a cure for most evils; but it has found no remedy for the worst of them all — the apathy of human beings.”

    “Keep your face to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadow.”

    “What a blind person needs is not a teacher but another self.”

    “My darkness has been filled with the light of intelligence, and behold, the outer day-lit world was stumbling and groping in social blindness.”

    “Character cannot be developed in ease and quiet. Only through experiences of trial and suffering can the soul be strengthened, vision cleared, ambition inspired and success achieved.”

    “College isn’t the place to go for ideas.”

  2. Anonymous | September 5th, 2007 at 7:33 AM

    Wana read more:

    http://www.quotationsbook.com/author/3972/

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