In our world of electronic and digital communications, one wonders what evidence of our day-to-day lives will exist for our descendants in the next century. Modern technology has given us the ability to be in almost constant touch with one another. But, will our emails and texts still exist a hundred years from now? For decades, letter writing was often an everyday occurrence for most people. Keeping in touch meant sitting down with pen and paper. Receiving a letter was often an exciting event, especially from someone miles away. And, for many, including Alexander Graham Bell and his family, these letters were something to be kept, not simply discarded once read. The Bells were profuse writers and as a result, their story can be told today through thousands of letters.

Born in Scotland in 1847, Alexander Graham Bell lived a unique life. Influenced by his father, Melville, a professor of elocution, and his deaf mother, Eliza; the loss of his brothers, Melville and Edward, to Consumption; and marriage to his deaf pupil, Mabel Hubbard, Bell left a legacy to the world that few could imagine living without. How this came to pass is best revealed through the letters between these individuals. Here, we present those letters to you.

A continuation of Mabel’s lengthy letter, she provides further description of their new home to her mother-in-law. Speaking of their servants, she described the troubles faced by Miss Home, a long-time employee of the family who had previously worked for Alec’s parents and grandfather. With this letter, the elder Bells learned of the establishment of the telephone in England and Europe. As with the telegraph system, the telephone in England was to be an operation of the government.

75 West Cromwell Rd
Kensington
Sunday, Dec 2nd, 1877

My dear Mrs. Bell

…There is only one servants room in the attic, two others were the young ladies rooms, and still another the artist brothers studio which will be Alec’s second workroom, Emma has the servants room, Miss Home the other large one, a pleasant and sunshiny apartment. The other room is my storeroom. It is rather soon yet to decide how I like housekeeping, but it will not be Miss Home’s or indeed Emma’s fault, if I find it very hard work. Emma was Mrs. Home’s servant, the best she ever had and though she does wear glasses and is rather awkward she certainly seems a very good servant neat and clean and painstaking. She does not know very much about waiting on the table but is willing to learn, Mrs. Home was only afraid she would not work well under Miss Home, but they have done very well thus far.

Miss Home gives me some trouble, for she is so anxious to do all she can that I fear she overtaxes her strength, I have to look after her all the time to see that she is not on her feet doing Emma’s work, for Emma is rather slow. Miss Home certainly looks very feeble. Alec says much aged, but I do not think so if she is, as he says sixty-five. She seems to have been the victim of a series of frauds it seems the man in possession of her house was forcibly ejected by the auctioneer acting under papers signed with Miss Home’s name — forgeries — Mr. Fluker the lawyer, who finally got possession of and let the house for her, retaining the deed of lease, and exacting as payment of her services forty-five out of the eighty pounds yearly she received as rent, died the day before we first saw Miss Home and Alec says he will go to the office tomorrow to see about Miss Home’s affairs.

Alec lectured before the Society of Arts on the 28th. I send you a copy of the lecture. You see it was published next day, quite without his knowledge. The lecture was not written but taken down by short hand reporters. The hall is small and will only hold about five hundred. Long before the doors were opened there was a crowd waiting outside and five minutes after they opened the hall antiroom and entrance were chocked by the crowd.

Mr. Reynolds said more were turned away than entered and the papers add that people staid in the entrance through the lecture though they could not possibly hear a word. Alec says it took him ten minutes to force his way into the hall and he was glad I did not go as I should have been crushed to death.

On Saturday he lectured in the Physical Science School of South Kensington Museum, but Alec says the lecture was a complete failure as he was tired out before he began and feeling faint and ill. The lecture began at three and he was sick all the afternoon but felt better in the evening and at two or three in the morning woke with an idea and forthwith set to work to write it down. Have you seen the Associated Press dispatch about the telephone. It is not sent yet but will be published in all tomorrow’s papers. Col. Reynolds told the reporters he would tell them something on condition that they publish it.

I believe it was decided only on Friday that the British government would take it up and in a few days some gentlemen will meet to consider the terms on which a Telephone Co. will be formed. Col. Reynolds thinks a United British Co. with capital of 250,000 own be organized before Xmas, but it may be necessary to form separate Co’s for the three countries.

Alec has lost his German patent but hopes to get another controling it. Col. Reynolds is going to take out the Russian patent. He buys a half interest by paying the expenses for that patent and of that of all other countries not yet paid for, all of which amounts to several hundred pounds.

We are going to send you a little Xmas greeting by a friend of Mrs. Home’s who sails on the 6th. We hope it will reach you at the right time and that it will please you. It goes with much love from us both.
With love to Mr. Bell and the Miss Symonds

Ever your affectionate
Mabel

The Bell Letters are annotated by Brian Wood, Curator, Bell Homestead National Historic Site

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Bells learn of establishment of telephone overseas

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01.02.2024

In our world of electronic and digital communications, one wonders what evidence of our day-to-day lives will exist for our descendants in the next century. Modern technology has given us the ability to be in almost constant touch with one another. But, will our emails and texts still exist a hundred years from now? For decades, letter writing was often an everyday occurrence for most people. Keeping in touch meant sitting down with pen and paper. Receiving a letter was often an exciting event, especially from someone miles away. And, for many, including Alexander Graham Bell and his family, these letters were something to be kept, not simply discarded once read. The Bells were profuse writers and as a result, their story can be told today through thousands of letters.

Born in Scotland in 1847, Alexander Graham Bell lived a unique life. Influenced by his father, Melville, a professor of elocution, and his deaf mother, Eliza; the loss of his brothers, Melville and Edward, to Consumption; and marriage to his deaf pupil, Mabel Hubbard, Bell left a legacy to the world that few could imagine living without. How this came to pass is best revealed through the letters between these individuals. Here, we present those letters to you.

A continuation of Mabel’s lengthy letter, she provides further description of their new home to her mother-in-law. Speaking of their servants, she described the troubles faced by Miss Home, a long-time employee of the family who had previously worked for Alec’s parents and grandfather. With this letter, the elder Bells learned of the establishment of the telephone in England and Europe.........

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