Posted on 10/31/2006 1:17:12 PM PST by GMMAC
Alexander Graham Bells granddaughter dies at 101
The Chronicle Herald
(Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada)
October 31, 2006
By JOCELYN BETHUNE
BADDECK Mabel Grosvenor, a granddaughter of famed telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell and likely the last person who had personal memories of him, died Monday at Baddeck. She was 101.
Born at Beinn Bhreagh, the Bells Cape Breton summer home, on July 28, 1905, she was the third child of Elsie Bell Grosvenor and Gilbert Grosvenor, longtime editor of National Geographic magazine.
While her parents travelled, writing and photographing faraway places for the publication, Mabel spent many summers with her grandparents at Beinn Bhreagh. In her late teens, she acted as secretary and note taker for Mr. Bell, quickly taking down dictation as he explored genetics, genealogy and hydrofoil boats.
She marched with her mother and grandmother in Washington, D.C., in 1913 for women to get the right to vote and was a witness to a number of Mr. Bells experiments, including the flight of the Cygnet, an early kite experiment of Mr. Bells Aerial Experiment Association.
In December 1907, her grandfather wrote: "I almost forgot to mention the witness who will probably live the longest after this event (and remember least about it) my little granddaughter Miss Mabel Grosvenor 2 years of age."
In the early 1920s, as Mr. Bell neared the end of his life, Ms. Grosvenor travelled with her grandparents to Scotland, where Mr. Bell searched for long-lost ancestors.
"He called it a farewell visit," Ms. Grosvenor said during an interview in 1994.
"He didnt really get interested in genealogy until his father died and one reason he went back was to try and look for more information. We went to parish offices to look through records and visited cemeteries. He found several cousins he didnt know existed."
She was one of five women to graduate from Johns Hopkins University in 1931 with medical degrees. She became a pediatrician and practised in Washington, D.C., for 35 years.
During a Bell Club meeting in the early 1990s, Ms. Grosvenor was asked by a nurse what the greatest medical advancement had been during the span of her career.
"Antibiotics," she said without hesitation.
Well into her 80s she was often seen driving her convertible around the streets of Baddeck.
"She was the leader of the family, a matriarch for sure," said Juanita MacAulay, a Baddeck resident who grew up on the estate where both her father and grandfather were caretakers.
In 1966, after her retirement, Dr. Mabel, as she is known locally, set about to operate the Beinn Bhreagh estate, which included a 37-room mansion built by her grandparents in the 1890s and several other homes, many of them dating back to her grandparents time.
"She didnt like the spotlight, but in her quiet manner, she got things done," said Mrs. MacAulay. For many close to the Bell story, Ms. Grosvenors death is the end of an amazing period in the history of Baddeck.
"Its the end of an era for sure," said Sharon Bartlett, a guide at the Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site and member of the Alexander Graham Bell Club, of which Ms. Grosvenor was honorary president.
"Who else in this world remembers Dr. or Mrs. Bell? And even if there were someone, they certainly wouldnt have had such an intimate relationship with them," Ms. Bartlett said.
Ms. Grosvenor was a very quiet and unassuming person, who would "sit in on a lecture (at the Bell museum) and no one would ever say who she was and she liked it that way. She was a very private person."
Her ability to recall names and connections, even into her 90s, was a source of amazement, said Ms. Bartlett, who played piano at Ms. Grosvenors 90th birthday party in 1995.
"When Dr. Mabel came back the next year, she thanked me for playing."
I assume she had a phone.
Now she can "see the light".
PING!
Wow!
Is Antonio Meucci's granddaughter still alive? :-)
I can't imagine that she lived in northern Nova Scotia year round. Did she keep her family's home in Washington? Also, I'm almost positive the Bell family still has their hunting plantation in Thomasville, GA.
CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW?
There's an interesting museum about Alexander Graham Bell in Baddeck--worth a stop if you're ever driving around Cape Breton Island.
Remembering those old black dial phones and their obnoxious ringers, I'm glad the man's name was not "Alexander Graham Siren".
Bell's grandaughter bribed the officials at the hospital to destroy all records of her birth. :-)
Fascinating story and, to put it in perspective, Montana would be the 8th western state to grant women the right to vote the following year, then two years later (1916), elect the first female to serve in congress, one Jeanette Rankin, a Republican, who would have the dubious distinction of being the only member of congress to vote against American entry into both World War I and World War II.
maybe....but you know she is now surrounded by the network!!!!!
I love stories about living memories from the past.
I wonder what she thought of cell phones and how far we'd come.
LOL
And how far backwards we have gone in some ways...
You know, it's true. I mean, Einstein did relativity in 1905. The education system at the time was so superior even if the technology hadn't caught up. We just don't see that kind of radical advancement like what they did, sometimes literally out of nothing.The things they could do with their minds.
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