Miss-Delectable
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- Apr 18, 2004
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Interesting story. Neat pictures. I didn't know about the National Geographic family connection.
Alexander Graham BellBell was committed to the advancement of science and technology. As such he took over the presidency of a small, almost unheard-of, scientific society in 1898: the National Geographic Society. Bell and his son-in-law, Gilbert Grosvenor, took the society's dry journal and added beautiful photographs and interesting writing -- turning National Geographic into one of the world's best-known magazines. He also is one of the founders of Science magazine.
how do you do?
Interesting piece! She's fortunate to have married somebody that cared for her and to love back. She had a very interesting and even exciting life. Funny now that National Geographic has ties directly to the Alexander G. Bell's family. What's next? Boycott the magazine for having that connection and daring to write an article that mentioned AGBell?
Interesting piece! She's fortunate to have married somebody that cared for her and to love back.
Curious... how does that make her different from the rest of us?
Some people can be very devoted to each other, even into old age. I don't see how hearing status should factor into that love. What if one was black and one was white? One was blind, the other seeing? Why would that change how they feel for each other?
You showed one example, but by specifically noted hearing status you make it a factor. I fail to see how you could know the outcome of hearing and deaf marriages from well over 100 years ago. It's not like they can't still communicate.
I think it's exemplary when couples stay close for so long. I fail to see how her deafness makes it some special effort on his part. Maybe Alexander was the fortunate one...