Alexander Graham Bell proposed using "ahoy" to answer the phone. |
Science & Industry |
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Bell's contemporary Thomas Edison proposed an entirely different word for answering phone calls: "hello." This relatively new term was first published in 1827, and despite its recency, Edison believed that "hello" was the perfect way to begin a phone call because it was easily distinguishable from other words. He first recommended using "hello" in an 1877 letter to the president of the Central District and Printing Telegraph Company of Pittsburgh, and the connection between "hello" and telephones only grew from there. | |
With both "ahoy" and "hello" as potential candidates, many early phone books accepted Edison's suggestion, or derivations thereof. The very first phone book published — released by the Connecticut District Telephone Company in New Haven — recommended that readers begin phone calls with "a firm and cheery 'hulloa.'" Other phone books of the time printed the term "hello" in their "how to" sections. By 1880, Bell's "ahoy" suggestion fell by the wayside, while Edison's "hello" was adopted as the standard. | |
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Alexander Graham Bell's middle name was a birthday present. | |||||||||
The inventor we know today as Alexander Graham Bell lacked a middle name when he was born on March 3, 1847. Christened Alexander Bell and known to his family simply as "Aleck," the young boy spent the first 10 years of his life without a middle name, unlike his brothers Melville James Bell and Edward Charles Bell. After expressing his desire for a middle name — possibly to help differentiate himself from his father and grandfather, both of whom were named Alexander — the future inventor got his wish. On Bell's 11th birthday, he was given permission to assume a middle name. He adopted the moniker "Graham," taking inspiration from a temporary houseguest and former student of Bell's father named Alexander Graham. The family admired the guest dearly, and rechristened their own son as Alexander Graham Bell in his honor. | |||||||||
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