
Velo Dart Grant Helps Students Build Solar-Powered Velomobile
In December 2022, the Alexander and Mabel Bell Legacy Foundation proudly awarded a grant to Munro Academy’s Production Technology STEM course, giving students the green
Biography
Alexander Graham Bell’s wife, Mabel Gardiner Hubbard Bell, was crucial to his success. Thanks to her wisdom and companionship, this gifted but eccentric man was able to concentrate on his inventions while Mabel took care of the practical details of their life together and created a stable and happy family home for their two daughters.
She lost her hearing after a bout of scarlet fever when she was five years old, but thanks to her parents’ determination and her own spirit, she learned to lip read in several languages and remained an active participant in the speaking world. She attended schools in the United States and Europe before becoming a private pupil of Alexander Graham Bell’s in Boston, when she was 15. Mabel also inspired her father to found the first oral school for the deaf in the United States, the Clarke School for the Deaf, now the Clarke Schools for Hearing and Speech.
Mabel Hubbard Bell’s major contribution to her husband’s endeavors was to form and manage an aviation company, the Aerial Experiment Association, based in Baddeck, Nova Scotia, where the Bells had a summer home. It was on the Bras D’Or Lake, near this small village, that in 1907 Mr. and Mrs. Bell and his assistants launched the Silver Dart, a sturdy little biplane that made the first manned flight in the British Empire.
However, Mrs. Bell is remembered in this remote Cape Breton village as far more than her husband’s helpmate. Mabel Hubbard Bell was a tireless advocate, encouraging women to educate themselves and effect changes in various areas of society, including health, home industries, women’s suffrage, children’s labor and children’s education. Mabel’s lasting contributions include the founding of Canada’s first and longest continuing women’s club, the first chapter of the Canadian Home and School Parent-Teacher Federation, the first Canadian Montessori School and the Baddeck Public Library. She died only five months after her husband, on January 3, 1923, and like him is buried on a hill overlooking the Bras D’Or Lake.
In December 2022, the Alexander and Mabel Bell Legacy Foundation proudly awarded a grant to Munro Academy’s Production Technology STEM course, giving students the green
The Royal Canadian Mint celebrated Canada’s spirit of innovation with a commemorative Alexander Graham Bell circulation coin: here’s what you should know. In 2022, the
Between 1880 and 1881, Alexander Graham Bell quietly delivered three loads of sealed tin boxes from Volta Laboratories to the Smithsonian Museum in Washington D.C.
Stay connected to The Alexander and Mabel Bell Legacy Foundation news, events, and update by joining our email list.
The Alexander and Mabel Bell Legacy Foundation (AMBLF) is an IRS-designated 501(c)(3) nonprofit, charitable organization number 47-1030298.
AMBLF
503 Washington Ave. # 186
Chestertown, MD 21620