A National Geographic Love Story

Alexander Graham Bell and Mabel Gardiner Hubbard’s Love Story in Photos

By Laura Wallach

Mabel Gardiner Hubbard was only five years old when scarlet fever rendered her deaf for life. At the age of 17, she would meet a young Scottish speech therapist who was destined to shape her life. Gardiner Greene Hubbard, Mabel’s father and National Geographic’s first president, took a liking to the industrious teacher and part-time inventor. We know him better as Alexander Graham Bell. This is their love story.

The 27-year-old Alexander fell in love with Mabel when she was 17, but it was an unreciprocated fancy. “He was tall and dark with jet-black hair and eyes, but dressed badly and carelessly,” she said. “I could never marry such a man!” Despite her initial disinterest, she began to grow fond of him during his time as her speech teacher and their relationship evolved. After one of her first classes with him, a giddy Mabel wrote to her mother: “Mr. Bell said today my voice is naturally sweet.” In a letter to Mabel on the night of their engagement, Alexander wrote, “I am afraid to fall asleep, lest I should find it all a dream — so I shall lie awake and think of you.”

The Bell family poses for a photo in 1885, three years before National Geographic’s founding. Alexander and Mabel had two daughters together — Elsie (left) and Daisy. Elsie went on to marry Gilbert Hovey Grosvenor, National Geographic magazine’s first editor-in-chief, solidifying the family ties to the Society for another generation.

Mabel sits with Alexander on a dock where he performed many of his experiments. In addition to the telephone, Alexander was fascinated with other inventions, such as flying machines and hydrofoil technology. “Every day I see something new in him to love and admire,” she said. “It is wonderful that he should be so clever…so utterly without conceit of any kind.”

Mabel proves that she is just as adventurous as her inventor husband while trying on a diving suit.

The 1939 film, The Story of Alexander Graham Bell,” starring Don Ameche as Alexander and Loretta Young as Mabel, captured the couple’s great romance on the big screen. There was also a book published in 1961 titled “Make a Joyful Sound: The Romance of Mabel Hubbard and Alexander Graham Bell.”

Even though she was deaf, Mabel gave Alexander a piano as a wedding gift and asked that he play for her every day. He gave her a crucifix made of pearls and a majority of his stock in the Bell Telephone Company, giving her majority ownership of the company later to be worth millions.

“I dread absence from you,” Alexander once wrote to Mabel. “Let us lay it down as a principle of our lives that we shall be together.” And be together they were, for over 45 years. Alexander died in 1922 from complications from diabetes. Shortly before he died, Mabel held on to his hand and pleaded, “Don’t leave me.” Unable to speak, he replied, “No” in sign language.


Photos courtesy of NGS Archives

Comments

  1. [...] Interesting Tidbit: It would seem obvious that Helen Keller knew Alexander Graham Bell and met with him a few times but I never knew this until I read the novel.  However, what surprised me more was that Bell’s wife (Mabel Hubbard) was also deaf, which was why he was so involved with experiments for hearing devices and such.  Before Helen, Mabel was one of the first children in the nation to lip-read.  To learn a bit about Bell and Mabel’s marriage, click below: http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2012/02/14/an-ng-kind-of-love/ [...]

  2. brittany
    kingsbury
    November 13, 2012, 11:10 pm

    he was cool

  3. [...] Alexander is said to know some sign language and have used it with his mother before deciding to communicate with her by speaking in low, sonorous tones very close to her forehead. He was also discouraged by his father to use sign language in order to promote his Visual Speech philosophy. Just before Bell died, he could not speak and signed “No” when his wife pleaded him not to leave her. [...]

  4. josue christopher
    malaysia
    May 11, 2012, 12:33 am

    I was born normal but at age 9 i became hearing loss as i grow older i became more deaf ..i stoped school at 13 and in all my life i do odd job@general work.i never know about deafness..but happened to met a groups of deaf using hand to communicate each other..
    from then on i tried my self to learn and improve my self and till today i still improving my sign language.
    i learned english language @broken english..but im still thankful to GOD for enabling me to lead this life…

    well at first it was very difficult..i tought i was only the deaf in this world..as i never knew about deafness..in 1998 or 1999 i mixed among the deaf just to learn more..in mid year 2k i began learning about internet or ict and there i knew about more or million of deaf arounds this globe and im happy to be among or parts of them or their deaf community.
    but i still feel lonely as i dunt have many deaf to share life exprience..so with this internet worlds or era of high technology we can share info to uplift the life of fellow deaf arounds this worlds.
    AGBell the founder of telecomunciation but i never knew he married a deaf and it’s good to know about that..i only knew marley matlin married to a policeman in canada..becoz many years ago marley matlin was famous in local television show ..
    peace to all the Deaf out there.

  5. IssaBella
    Sacramento, CA
    May 7, 2012, 12:45 pm

    I have to say there is not enough in this article to really cause me to say “aw”. And I highly doubt the man ever signed “No”, mouthed it maybe.

    AGB was not a fan of Deaf, and yes he fell in love with a Deaf woman, he never wanted to learn sign/ASL and made it clear that he didn’t want Deaf to marry Deaf. That we Deaf needed to forget we are Deaf and learn to speak. Sparking years of oppression, isolation and more even to present day.

  6. [...] adventurous life and love story of Mable Here's an interesting piece of history with a bunch of black and white photos written by the National Geographic. A piece that covers the [...]

  7. matSeattle
    United States
    March 23, 2012, 4:16 am

    You did not realized that Alexander Graham Bell was eugenics, Due AG Bell against Deaf couple.. he believe that Deaf man should not married to Deaf woman. Find a match with hearing spouse or oppoiste. There is no genetic often .. It is huge misunderstood.. Sad Mabel did not learn ASL back in 1870′s

    http://www.workersforjesus.com/dfi/961.htm

    somewhat I do not agree with AGBell Foundiation today

    matSeattle

  8. Thomas R. Harrington
    Bagdad, KY
    February 27, 2012, 6:19 pm

    It’s fascinatingly ironic that Alexander Graham Bell, who believed strongly in the “oral” method of deaf communication and tried to discourage the use of sign language by deaf people, and Mabel, who even more so than her husband rejected the use of sign language, had to resort to signs to communicate on his deathbed.

  9. Absolutely Eco - Friendly
    Florida, U.S.A.
    February 23, 2012, 11:42 pm

    What an amazing, beautiful and interesting story. It does not surprise me that an organization of the importance of National Geography had such loving beginnings. They were both very special people, no doubt about it. It was the beginning of something really big indeed.

  10. Andre
    Brazil
    February 22, 2012, 1:45 pm

    So beatiful! Thanks for this opportunity!

  11. Wanda
    USA
    February 21, 2012, 9:02 pm

    I didn’t realize Alexander was so handsome! Love. About Mabel’s love for him, all I can comment is “Love conquers all” in spite of flaws. HIm professing his love for Mabel, such love is rare and it is why Mabel couldn’t resist him and why he was her whole world and why she seemed not to question his somewhat oppressive unfounded political obsessions to suppress Deaf People’s Right to Freedom ot choice to the same love that he had for Mabel. She probably did not know? Or did she believe what Alexander believed, too? It doesn’t matter because in her time it was very difficult being a female and it was survival of the fittest. It wasn’t easy being a deaf female in that era. It was a living nightmare. She did the smartest thing. Being a wife, mother and a housewife is on top of the list. Husband comes first, not politics. I was born deaf.

  12. behzad
    Iran
    February 16, 2012, 1:11 am

    I am utterly thankful to National Geographic

  13. Ima Ryma
    February 15, 2012, 4:32 am

    She was deaf and he came to her.
    He came to help her with her speech.
    Berween them, true love did occur.
    They were devoted each to each.
    They married and she gave to him
    A piano to play each day,
    So that their love might never dim.
    She could not hear, but watched him play.
    Together for forty five years,
    He was first to end of the line.
    She watched him leave her through her tears,
    Saying a last good-bye in sign.

    Alexander Graham Bell’s life
    Was fulfilled with Mabel, his wife.