Radcliffe College

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    Essay About Helen Keller

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    “Never bend your head. Always hold it high. Look the world straight in the eye.” - Helen Keller On June 27, 1880 in Tuscumbia, Alabama a baby was born Helen Keller. Helen was born with her senses and could see and started speaking when she was just six months old. Then, her life started going downhill, 19 months into Helen’s life she became blind and deaf from an illness called scarlet fever. Most of her childhood was very rough for her because she couldn’t play with the other kids and couldn’t

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    Helen Adams Keller was born on June 27, 1880, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. In 1882, she fell ill and was hit blind, deaf, and mute. Helen Keller is an admirable woman in history because she helped other people with similar diseases and was the co-founder for the American the Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Meanwhile, Anne Sullivan helped her with her life, education, and social activism. As Keller grew up in her childhood she had a companion, Martha Washington, who helped her develop a limited method of

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    Helen Keller Goals

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    everyone knew Helen was destined for greatness, she started school and then succeeded to move on to college. She rose to her educational heights and continued to rise up in the world. Despite Helen Keller’s setbacks, during her lifetime she accomplished great things that few people, who have the privilege to see, hear and speak, can achieve. From a young age Helen Keller attended many schools and even college, she succeeded at each school while still managing and overcoming any setbacks with her disability

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    Katharine Hathaway and Her Fight Against Spinal Tuberculosis The fight of not moving for twenty-four hours would be difficult. Katharine Hathaway fought her way through spinal tuberculosis for twelve years in her beddoing absolutely nothing. Katharine Hathaway was born in Baltimore in 1890, but spent most of her life in Salem, Massachusetts. Hathaway was diagnosed with spinal tuberculosis in 1895 at the age of five (Lobb 31). Spinal tuberculosis, a destructive form of tuberculosis, it is most

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    Helen Keller Speech

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    As humans, it is only natural to take countless things for granted as we live our daily lives. There is beauty that surrounds us like the majestic Rocky Mountains, the crisp blue skies, birds sweetly singing in the early morning, or even the simple sound of someone’s loving voice. People are born with the ability to see and hear the everyday activities going on around them but for some less fortunate, these abilities are not a characteristic they possess. Living as a deaf or blind person in today’s

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    Helen Adams Keller was born a healthy little girl, but she became very ill when she was just eighteen months old and was struck blind and deaf. When she about six Helen got a teacher, Annie Sullivan, who taught her how to read, write and communicate with people. She was able to have many works published and worked as a lecturer to educate people about others with disabilities. Helen Keller despite her condition was able to do great things in her life and to help benefit herself and the lives of other

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    for the Deaf. In 1896, at the age of 16 Keller passed the admissions examination to Radcliffe College (Anonymous, 1992). She began college in 1900, and Sullivan attended class with her to tap out the words of the instructor in Keller’s hand. In 1904, at the age of 24, Keller graduated from Radcliffe College, becoming the first deaf blind person to earn a Bachelor degree (Thompson, 2003). While in college, Keller wrote the first volume of her autobiography, The Story of My Life. However,

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    in the world that suffer from these disabilities. They also learn how to adapt to the disabilities they suffer. Helen Keller was a very historic figure, who was both blind and deaf. This paper will include: the early life of Helen Keller, Keller’s college experience, Keller’s first book, Keller’s job, and honors and recognitions that Keller received. Helen Keller was born June 27th, 1880. Keller was born as a normal baby. She was stricken with an illness called “brain fever” at nineteen months old

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    attended the Wright-Humason School for the deaf in New York City and worked on improving her communication skills and studied regular academic subjects. Two years later she attended the Cambridge School for young ladies. In 1899 she had gone to Radcliffe college and graduated in 1904 with honors, at the age of 24. During her lifetime, Helen had won many awards, which include the Theodore Roosevelt Distinguished Service Medal in 1936; the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1964; and got elected to the

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    influential is because she followed her passions. I know this because in the article Biography.com it states,”Beginning in 1887, Keller's teacher, Anne Sullivan, helped her make tremendous progress with her ability to communicate, and Keller went on to college, graduating in 1904.”This quote supports my answer because it shows that even women that are blind and/or deaf deserve a chance at education, which shows that she followed her passions by getting an education.https://www.biography.com/people/helen-keller-9361967

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