Category
page 1Alexander Graham Bell
Alexander Graham Bell
Canadian-American scientist inventor of telephone (1847–1922)
dictation machine
sound recording device most commonly used to record speech for later playback or to be typed into print
Glenn Curtiss
American aviator and industrialist (1878-1930)
Graham Bell Island
island in Franz Josef archipelago
phonograph cylinder
medium for recording and reproducing sound
.jpg)
Photophone
thumb|alt=An image of darkened brass historical plaque with a streak of green corrosion running down it, mounted on the exterior side of a brick building. |A historical plaque on the side of the Franklin School in Washington, D.C. which marks one of the points from which the photophone was demonstrated
thumb|A diagram from one of Bell's 1880 papers
Gardiner Greene Hubbard
American lawyer (1822–1897)
Alexander Melville Bell
British linguist (1819–1905)
Bras d'Or Lake
lake in Nova Scotia, Canada
David Grandison Fairchild
American botanist, mycologist and explorer (1869-1954)
Thomas A. Watson
American inventor and businessperson; assistant to Alexander Graham Bell (1854–1934)
IEEE Alexander Graham Bell Medal
award
Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor
American photojournalist and magazine editor

Thomas Selfridge
first person ever to die in an airplane crash
Bell Telephone Company
American telecommunications firm
Visible Speech
featural phonetic representation script
Mabel Gardiner Hubbard
American businesswoman

graphophone
The Graphophone was the name and trademark of an improved version of the phonograph. It was initially designed at the Volta Laboratory established by Alexander Graham Bell in Washington, D.C., United States. It was co-invented by Alexander Graham Bell, Charles Sumner Tainter, and Chichester Bell in 1886.
Bell System
telephone service provider
Second International Congress on Education of the Deaf
1880 deaf educational congress in Milan, Italy
AEA June Bug
experimental aircraft by Glenn Curtiss
Aerial Experiment Association
1907–1909 aircraft research group
Beinn Bhreagh
human settlement and mountain in Nova Scotia, Canada
Red Wing
experimental aircraft by the Aerial Experiment Association
Cygnet
experimental aircraft

Chichester Bell
British chemist
Melville Bell Grosvenor
American magazine editor
Silver Dart
experimental aircraft by the Aerial Experiments Association
Gilbert Melville Grosvenor
American editor
HD-4
HD-4 or Hydrodome number 4 was an early research hydrofoil watercraft developed by the scientist Alexander Graham Bell. It was designed and built at the Bell Boatyard on Bell's Beinn Bhreagh estate near Baddeck, Nova Scotia. In 1919, it set a world marine speed record of .
Mabel H. Grosvenor
American pediatrician
Walter Seymour Allward
Canadian sculptor (1874–1955)
Volta Laboratory and Bureau
U.S. National Historic Landmark research laboratory
White Wing
experimental aircraft by the Aerial Experiments Association