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Definition of Helen Adams Keller
1. Noun. United States lecturer and writer who was blind and deaf from the age of 19 months; Anne Sullivan taught her to read and write and speak; Helen Keller graduated from college and went on to champion the cause of blind and deaf people (1880-1968).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Helen Adams Keller
Literary usage of Helen Adams Keller
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Stories of Achievement edited by Asa Don Dickinson (1916)
"Helen Adams Keller HOW SHE LEARNED TO SPEAK WHEN nineteen months old Helen Keller
was stricken with an illness which robbed her of both sight and hearing. ..."
2. Every Life a Delight by James Henry Potts (1914)
"In Helen Adams Keller the two afflictions unite. She was deprived of the power
of vision and of hearing at the tender age of nineteen months. ..."
3. Helen Keller Souvenir: No. 2, 1892-1899 : Commemorating the Harvard Final by Volta Bureau (U.S.) (1899)
"The first year of college preparatory work done by Miss Helen Adams Keller closed
in June, 1897. A brief review of it will be of interest to all who have at ..."
4. The Story of My Life by Helen Keller, John Albert Macy, Annie Sullivan (1905)
"With much love and many kisses, from your affectionate little friend, HELEN ADAMS
KELLER. During the summer Miss Sullivan was away from Helen for three ..."
5. The Part Taken by Women in American History by John A. Logan, Mary Simmerson Cunningham Logan (1912)
"Miss Giffin was particularly active in bringing about and conducting these
delightful entertainments. Helen Adams Keller. Miss Keller was born at Tuscumbia, ..."
6. The Association Review (1899)
"... we will give it substantially as it came to us : " Helen Adams Keller, daughter
of Arthur H. and Kate (Adams) Keller, was born June 27, 1880, ..."