This page is about the life of Helen Keller, the
deafblind woman who became a role model for millions of people, including me !! Her life influenced me in many ways... including
the time when i chose my major (child education) in college..
Helen Adams Keller was born on 27 June 1880 in Tuscumbia,
a small rural town in Northwest Alabama, USA. The daughter of Captain Arthur Henley Keller and Kate Adams Keller she was born
with full sight and hearing.
Kate Keller was a tall, statuesque blond with blue eyes.
She was some twenty years younger than her husband Captain Keller, a loyal southerner who had proudly served in the Confederate
Army during the American Civil War.
The house they lived in was a simple, white, clapboard
house built in 1820 by Helen’s grandparents. At the time of Helen’s birth the family were far from wealthy with
Captain Keller earning a living as both a cotton plantation owner and the editor of a weekly local newspaper, the “North
Alabamian”. Helen’s mother, as well as working on the plantation, would save money by making her own butter, lard,
bacon and ham.
Helen falls ill
But Helen’s life was to change dramatically. In
February 1882, when Helen was nineteen months old, she fell ill. To this day the nature of her ailment remains a mystery.
The doctors of the time called it “brain fever”, whilst modern day doctors think it may have been scarlet fever
or meningitis.
Whatever the illness, Helen was, for many days, expected
to die. When, eventually, the fever subsided, Helen’s family rejoiced believing their daughter to be well again.
However, Helen’s mother soon noticed how her daughter
was failing to respond when the dinner bell was rang or when she passed her hand in front of her daughter’s eyes.
It thus became apparent that Helen’s illness had
left her both blind and deaf.
The following few years proved very hard for Helen and
her family. Helen became a very difficult child, smashing dishes and lamps and terrorising the whole household with her screaming
and temper tantrums. Relatives regarded her as a monster and thought she should be put into an institution.
By the time Helen was six her family had become desperate.
Looking after Helen was proving too much for them. Kate Keller had read in Charles Dickens’ book “American Notes”
of the fantastic work that had been done with another deaf and blind child, Laura Bridgman, and travelled to a specialist
doctor in Baltimore for advice. They were given confirmation that Helen would never see or hear again but were told not to
give up hope, the doctor believed Helen could be taught and he advised them to visit a local expert on the problems of deaf
children. This expert was Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor of the telephone, Bell was now concentrating on what he considered
his true vocation, the teaching of deaf children.
Alexander Graham Bell suggested that the Kellers write
to Michael Anagnos, director of the Perkins Institution and Massachusetts Asylum for the Blind, and request that he try and
find a teacher for Helen. Michael Anagnos considered Helen’s case and immediately recommended a former pupil of the
institution, that woman was Anne Sullivan.
Anne Sullivan
Anne Sullivan had lost the majority of her sight at
the age of five. By the age of ten, her mother had died and her father deserted her. She and her brother Jimmie were sent
to the poorhouse in February 1876.
Anne’s brother died in the poorhouse. It was October
1880 before Anne finally left and went to commence her education at the Perkins Institution. One summer during her time at
the institute, Anne had two operations on her eyes, which led to her regaining enough sight to be able to read normal print
for short periods of time.
Anne graduated from Perkins in 1886 and began to search
for work. Finding work was terribly difficult for Anne, due to her poor eyesight, and when she received the offer from Michael
Anagnos to work as the teacher of Helen Keller, a deaf-blind mute, although she had no experience in this area, she accepted
willingly.
Helen meets Anne
On 3 March 1887 Anne arrived at the house in Tuscumbia
and for the first time met Helen Keller. Anne immediately started teaching Helen to finger spell. Spelling out the word “Doll”
to signify a present she had brought with her for Helen. The next word she taught Helen was “Cake”. Although Helen
could repeat these finger movements she could not quite understand what they meant. And while Anne was struggling trying to
help her understand, she was also struggling to try and control Helen’s continuing bad behaviour.
Anne and Helen moved into a small cottage on the land
of the main house to try and get Helen to improve her behaviour. Of particular concern were Helen’s table manners. She
had taken to eating with her hands and from the plates of everyone at the table.
Anne’s attempts to improve Helen’s table
manners and make her brush her own hair and button her shoes led to more and more temper tantrums. Anne punished these tantrums
by refusing to “talk” with Helen by spelling words on her hands.
Over the coming weeks, however, Helen’s behaviour
did begin to improve as a bond grew between the two. Then, after a month of Anne’s teaching, what the people of the
time called a “miracle” occurred.
Helen had until now not yet fully understood the meaning
of words. When Anne led her to the water pump on 5 April 1887, all that was about to change.
As Anne pumped the water over Helen’s hand , Anne
spelled out the word water in the girl’s free hand. Something about this explained the meaning of words within Helen,
and Anne could immediately see in her face that she finally understood.
Helen later recounted the incident:
“We walked down the path to the well-house, attracted
by the fragrance of the honey-suckle with which it was covered. Someone was drawing water and my teacher placed my hand under
the spout. As the cool stream gushed over one hand she spelled into the other the word water, first slowly, then rapidly.
I stood still, my whole attention fixed upon the motions of her fingers. Suddenly I felt a misty consciousness as of something
forgotten, a thrill of returning thought, and somehow the mystery of language was revealed to me.”
Helen immediately asked Anne for the name of the pump
to be spelt on her hand and then the name of the trellis. All the way back to the house Helen learned the name of everything
she touched and also asked for Anne’s name. Anne spelled the name “Teacher” on Helen’s hand. Within
the next few hours Helen learnt the spelling of thirty new words.
Helen’s progress from then on was astonishing.
Her ability to learn was far in advance of anything that anybody had seen before in someone without sight or hearing. It wasn’t
long before Anne was teaching Helen to read, firstly with raised letters and later with braille, and to write with both ordinary
and braille typewriters.
Michael Anagnos was keen to promote Helen, one of the
numerous articles on her that he wrote said of Helen that “she is a phenomenon”. These articles led to a wave
of publicity about Helen with pictures of her reading Shakespeare or stroking her dog appearing in national newspapers.
Helen had become famous, and as well as again visiting
Alexander Graham Bell, she visited President Cleveland at the White House. By 1890 she was living at the Perkins Institute
and being taught by Anne. In March of that year Helen met Mary Swift Lamson who over the coming year was to try and teach
Helen to speak. This was something that Helen desperately wanted and although she learned to understand what somebody else
was saying by touching their lips and throat, her efforts to speak herself proved at this stage to be unsuccessful. This was
later attributed to the fact that Helen’s vocal chords were not properly trained prior to her being taught to speak.
The Frost King
On 4 November 1891 Helen sent Michael Anagnos a birthday
gift of a short story she had written called “The Frost King”. Anagnos was so delighted with the story that he
had soon published it in a magazine hailing its importance in literary history.
However, it was soon discovered that Helen’s story
was the same as one called “The Frost Fairies” by Margaret Canby. This was ultimately to be the end of Helen and
Anne’s friendship with Michael Anagnos. He felt he had been made to appear foolish by what he considered to be Helen’s
deception.
There had to be an investigation and it was discovered
that Helen had previously been read the story some years before and had obviously remembered it. Helen always claimed not
to recall the original story and it should always be remembered that Helen was still only 11 years old, however, this incident
created a rift that would never heal between Helen, Anne and Anagnos. It also created great doubt in Helen’s own mind
as to whether any of her thoughts were truly her own.
In 1894 Helen and Anne met John D Wright and Dr Thomas
Humason who were planning to set up a school to teach speech to the deaf in New York City. Helen and Anne were very excited
by this and the assurances of the two men that Helen’s speech could be improved excited them further. Helen thus agreed
to attend the Wright-Humason School for the Deaf.
Unfortunately though, Helen’s speech never really
improved beyond the sounds that only Anne and others very close to her could understand.
Helen enters Radcliffe College
Helen moved on to the Cambridge School for Young Ladies
in 1896 and in the Autumn of 1900 entered Radcliffe College, becoming the first deafblind person to have ever enrolled at
an institution of higher learning.
Life at Radcliffe was very difficult for Helen and Anne,
and the huge amount of work involved led to deterioration in Anne’s eyesight. During their time at the College Helen
began to write about her life. She would write the story both in braille and on a normal typewriter. It was at this time that
Helen and Anne met with John Albert Macy who was to help edit Helen’s first book “The Story of My Life”
which was published in 1903 and although it sold poorly at first it has since become a classic.
On 28 June 1904 Helen graduated from Radcliffe College,
becoming the first deafblind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree.
John Macy became good friends with Helen and Anne, and
in May 1905 John and Anne were married. Anne’s name now changed to Anne Sullivan Macy. The three lived together in Wrentham,
Massachusetts, and during this time Helen wrote “The World I Live In”, revealing for the first time her thoughts
on her world. It was also during this time that John Macy introduced her to a new and revolutionary way of viewing the world.
And in 1909 Helen became a member of the Socialist Party of Massachusetts.
In 1913 “Out of the Dark” was published.
This was a series of essays on socialism and its impact on Helen’s public image was immense. Everyone now knew Helen’s
political views.
Helen tours the World
Helen and Anne filled the following years with lecture
tours, speaking of her experiences and beliefs to enthralled crowds. Her talks were interpreted sentence by sentence by Anne
Sullivan, and were followed by question and answer sessions.
Although Helen and Anne made a good living from their
lectures, by 1918 the demand for Helen’s lectures had diminished and they were touring with a more light-hearted vaudeville
show, which demonstrated Helen’s first understanding of the word “water”. These shows were hugely successful
from the very first performance, a review of which read as follows:
“Helen Keller has conquered again, and the Monday
afternoon audience at the Palace, one of the most critical and cynical in the World, was hers.”
At this time they were also offered the chance to make
a film in Hollywood and they jumped at the opportunity. “Deliverance”, the story of Helen’s life, was made.
Helen was, however, unhappy with the glamorous nature of the film and it unfortunately did not prove to be the financial success
that they had hoped for.
The vaudeville appearances continued with Helen answering
a wide range of questions on her life and her politics and Anne translating Helen’s answers for the enthralled audience.
They were earning up to two thousand dollars a week, which was a considerable sum of money at the time.
In 1918 Helen, Anne and John moved to Forest Hills in
New York. Helen used their new home as a base for her extensive fundraising tours for the American Foundation for the Blind.
She not only collected money, but also campaigned tirelessly to alleviate the living and working conditions of blind people,
who at that time were usually badly educated and living in asylums. Her endeavours were a major factor in changing these conditions.
Helen’s mother Kate died in 1921 from an unknown
illness, and this left Anne as the sole constant in Helen’s life. However that same year Anne fell ill again and this
was followed in 1922 by a severe bout of bronchitis which left her unable to speak above a whisper and thus unable to work
with Helen on stage anymore. At this point Polly Thomson, who had started working for Helen and Anne in 1914 as a secretary,
took on the role of explaining Helen to the theatre going public.
They also spent a lot of time touring the world raising
money for blind people. In 1931 they met King George and Queen Mary at Buckingham Palace, who were said to be deeply impressed
by Helen’s ability to understand what people said through touch.
All the while Anne’s health was getting worse,
and with the news of the death of John Macy in 1932, although their marriage had broken up some years before, her spirit was
finally broken. She died on 20 October 1936.
When Anne died, Helen and Polly moved to Arcan Ridge,
in Westport, Connecticut, which would be Helen’s home for the rest of her life.
After World War Two, Helen and Polly spent years travelling
the world fundraising for the American Foundation for the Overseas Blind. They visited Japan, Australia, South America, Europe
and Africa.
Whilst away during this time Helen and Polly learnt
of the fire that destroyed their home at Arcan Ridge. Although the house would be rebuilt, as well as the many mementoes that
Helen and Polly lost, also destroyed was the latest book that Helen had been working on about Anne Sullivan, called “Teacher”.
It was also during this time that Polly Thomson’s
health began to deteriorate and whilst in Japan she had a mild stroke. Doctors advised Polly to stop the continuous touring
she and Helen did, and although initially they slowed down a bit, the touring continued once Polly had recovered.
In 1953 a documentary film “The Unconquered”
was made about Helen’s life, this was to win an Academy Award as the best feature length documentary .It was at the
same time that Helen began work again on her book “Teacher”, some seven years after the original had been destroyed.
The book was finally published in 1955.
Polly Thomson had a stroke in 1957, she was never to
fully recover and died on March 21, 1960. Her ashes were deposited at the National Cathedral in Washington DC next to those
of Anne Sullivan. It was the nurse who had been brought in to care for Polly in her last years, Winnie Corbally, who was to
take care of Helen in her remaining years.
The Miracle Worker
It was in 1957 that “The Miracle Worker”
was first performed. A drama portraying Anne Sullivan’s first success in communicating with Helen as a child, it first
appeared as a live television play in the United States.
In 1959 it was re-written as a Broadway play and opened
to rave reviews. It became a smash hit and ran for almost two years. In 1962 it was made into a film and the actresses playing
Anne and Helen both received Oscars for their performances.
Helen retires from public life
In October 1961 Helen suffered the first of a series
of strokes, and her public life was to draw to a close. She was to spend her remaining years being cared for at her home in
Arcan Ridge.
Her last years were not however without excitement,
and in 1964 Helen was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian award, by President Lyndon
Johnson. A year later she was elected to the Women’s Hall of Fame at the New York World’s Fair.
On June 1, 1968, at Arcan Ridge, Helen Keller died peacefully
in her sleep. Helen was cremated in Bridgeport, Connecticut and a funeral service was held at the National Cathedral in Washington
DC where the urn containing her ashes would later be deposited next to those of Anne Sullivan and Polly Thomson.
Helen’s legacy
Today Helen’s final resting place is a popular
tourist attraction and the bronze plaque erected to commemorate her life has the following inscription written in braille:
“Helen Keller and her beloved companion Anne Sullivan
Macy are interred in the columbarium behind this chapel.”
So many people have visited the chapel, and touched
the braille dots, that the plaque has already had to be replaced twice.
If Helen Keller were born today her life would undoubtedly
have been completely different. Her life long dream was to be able to talk, something that she was never really able to master.
Today the teaching methods exist that would have helped Helen to realise this dream. What would Helen have made of the technology
available today to blind and deafblind individuals? Technology that enables blind and deafblind people, like Helen, to communicate
directly, and independently, with anybody in the world.
Helen Keller may not have been directly responsible
for the development of these technologies and teaching methods. But with the help of Anne Sullivan, through her writings,
lectures and the way she lived her life, she has shown millions of people that disability need not be the end of the world.
In Helen’s own words:
“The public must learn that the
blind man is neither genius nor a freak nor an idiot. He has a mind that can be educated, a hand which can be trained, ambitions
which it is right for him to strive to realise, and it is the duty of the public to help him make the best of himself so that
he can win light through work.”