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Posts Tagged ‘1876’

3
Nov

Annie Oakley: American Woman and Marksman

   Posted by: Trish    in American History, Cultural History, History Blog, Modern History, Personalities in History, The Old West, World History

Annie Oakley: second half of the 1880's poster for Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, advertising 'Miss Annie Oakley, the peerless lady wing-shot'Annie Oakley died on November 3, 1924 from pernicious anemia. Her life is a testament to the strength and determination of American frontierswomen. Skilled with weapons and equal to many of her male counterparts, Annie Oakley remains an integral part of western history.

Born in Ohio on August 13, 1860, Annie’s given name was Phoebe Ann Oakley Mozee. She had a total of seven siblings and came from a childhood of economic hardship and parental death. She never received any sort of a formal education. When her mother lost her second husband, Annie was put into care for a while but suffered abuse and was returned to her mother who married for a third time. Oakley’s childhood made her tough and resilient and perhaps a bit of a loner.

Oakley was an expert marksman from a very early age and started practicing her shooting skills at the tender age of 9. At the age of 16, she was already receiving money for her shooting games and entered her first professional competition against her husband to be Frank Butler (1850-1926). They married in 1876.

In the early 1880s, Oakley traveled with her husband on the Vaudeville circuit, performing shooting feats and contests for a paying audience. They went across the country together where Oakley got to meet many famous people of the day, including Sitting Bull who she became friends with. Sitting Bull gave Annie Oakley the nickname of “Little Sure Shot.” Her skills as a marksmen were never questioned by man or woman, rich or poor, townsfolk or royal. Her place in history was quickly secured.

Annie Oakley, with a gun Buffalo Bill gave her - 1922It was in 1885 that the star crossed (or rifle crossed) couple joined the famous Buffalo Bill Wild West Show. Butler stepped aside so that his wife could become the female star of the Wild West show. They traveled all over Europe and even performed for Queen Victoria. Oakley won numerous medals and awards for her skills. They stayed with the show for 16 years. Even in her own time, Oakley was considered a role model for other women from both the States and the rest of the world.

Despite offering to lead a female regimen in World War I, Oakley ended up spending her time with the Red Cross during the war and spending time for her famous show dog, Dave. A comeback was planned for the early 1920s but a car accident put both Butlers out of commission for some time.

Oakley and Butler stayed together until the very end passing away within three weeks of each other in November of 1926. Their story is truly endearing and inspirational and Annie Oakley will forever be remembered as America’s cowgirl. Her role in the perception of women and creating the wild stories of the American west will endure long after the last remnants of western boomtowns crumble and disappear.


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Tags: 1860, 1876, 1880s, 1885, 1920s, 1924, 1926, America's Cowgirl, American History, American West, Annie Oakley, August 13, Buffalo Bill, expert marksman, Frank Butler, History DVDs, Little Sure Shot, November 3, Old West Store, Phoebe Ann Oakley Mozee, Queen Victoria, replica guns, Replica Swords, scale model kits, Sitting Bull, Vaudeville, wild west, Wild West Show, world war i

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3
Mar

Alexander Graham Bell Invents the Telephone

   Posted by: Trish    in American History, Cultural History, Historical Events, History Blog, Modern History, Personalities in History, Pop Culture History, Technology History, World History

History of the Telephone and Alexander Graham BellOn March 3, 1847, one of the most important characters in modern communications history was born. Alexander Graham Bell revolutionized the conversation and gave the world a number of time saving life changing inventions that continue to make our lives easier.  Many people don’t realize it was Bell’s interest in improving the lives of the deaf that motivated many of his inventions in the telecommunication field.

Bell was born in Edinburgh, Scotland and studied at the famous Edinburgh University.  Communication always played a large role in the Scottish physicist’s life as his father was a speech pathologist and taught him about speech impediments and dealing with the issues of the deaf community. The fact that Mrs. Bell, Alexander’s mother was deaf was a motivating factor for both father and son.

The TelegraphLife in the Bell family was both full of curiosity and education as well as personal sorrow. Bell lost both of his brothers to tuberculosis by the age of 23. In 1872, he moved to America and began teaching at the Boston School for the deaf, where he focused his time on teaching his hard of hearing students on how to speak. This was something hardly conceived of at the time. Deafness was nothing new to Bell and in fact he ended up marrying one of his students, Mabel Hubbard. Sound, speech and hearing constantly consumed Bell’s mind and life.

Bell hoped to improve on the telegraph that was invented in 1843 by finding a way to get messages from one telegraph station to another without them having to be taken on foot. He hoped to used tonal noises sent by wire between stations to communicate the text of messages. He was working on this invention (known as the hormonal telegraph) when he met another famous inventor, Thomas Watson.

Watson worked in an electric shop in which he was often assigned to assist would be inventors with their ideas. When working with Bell, the two accidentally transmitted sound through wire using electromagnets. The concept of the telephone was born.

One end of the first telephone call: 710 Main Street, Cambridge, MassachusettsIn 1876, Bell patented the idea for his telephone during which time, he improved his concept and rather than just sound being transmitted by wire, Bell discovered how to transmit the human voice by wires. 

The first conversation to take place over the wire systems occurred on March 10, 1876 when Mr. Bell called Mr. Watson to assist him with some spilled battery acid. Watson clearly heard Bell’s voice travel through the wires and came to his assistance.

The first public demonstration of the invention took place in Philadelphia during the same year, causing a stir across both the scientific and lay communities. Rutherford B. Hayes installed a telephone in the Whitehouse two years later and became the first American president to make a phone call.

In the years to come, the Bell Telephone Company (causing competition and several litigious suits from the telegraph companies) would become AT&T, one of the largest and most successful phone companies of all time. When Bell died in 1922, every telephone exchange in the world stopped transmitting for one minute to pay their respects to the man who had started it all.

Bell always considered himself a teacher and not an inventor. His work with deaf students would inspire others, including the famous Helen Keller who dedicated her own biography to him. Today we remember Bell as the inventor of the telephone and forget the steps that lead him to that discovery and the people that inspired his work. Imagining a world without his work is difficult with the telephone being as ubiquitous as the television set or the refrigerator. Inventions become essential to civilization over time and it is hard to imagine they never were.
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Because of Mr. Bell, we can talk to people across the globe, making the world and all its barriers a little smaller and a little easier to climb over.

Tags: 1843, 1847, 1872, 1876, Alexander Graham Bell, American inventors, Antique Replica Phones, AT&T history, Boston School for the deaf, Crosley CR56 1950s Style Functional Pay Phone, Crosley Radio, Crosley Radio CR60 1937 Style Functional 302 Series Phone, Crosley Radio CR91 1920 Country Kitchen Wall Phone, Crosley Radio CR93 1920s Style Functional Sultan Phone, Crosley Radio Store, Crosley Vintage Phones, Edinburgh University, Helen Keller, history of the telephone, hormonal telegraph, invention of the telephone, Inventions, origins of the telephone, Rutherford B. Hayes, Telephone, telephone history, The Telegraph, Thomas Watson, Vintage Phones

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