Helen Keller
America’s First Disabled Person to Change the World
Writer, teacher, and role model, these three facts represent what some people have thought about Helen Keller. The role model Helen Keller was thought to only be the first person to communicate with others despite being blind and deaf, but she was so much more. Helen Keller changed the world by showing the world that people could still make a difference in the world even if she was both blind and deaf. Helen Keller not only learned to communicate with others with her disabilities but she also helped and taught others with similar conditions. She will be remembered as the world's first blind and deaf person to speak, read, write and graduate college.
The early life
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Helen Keller has had many accomplishments. For example she has gotten honors and awards from foreign governments and international bodies. She also co-founded the Helen-Keller International to fight the causes and consequences of malnutrition and blindness (biography.com). Helen helped to found the Massachusetts Commision for the Blind while serving the commision (Compton, 196). In 1924, Helen started a new fob, The American Foundation for the Blind. Helen talked with Kings, Queens, and presidents raising funds by doing so she became an ambassador (Thompson, 97-98). She bettered conditions for the blind in developed and war-nations. Keller even started the HElen Keller Endowment Fund and also asked for funds from wealthy people. Some of her many awards include Chevalier’s ribbon of the French Legion of Honor and Alumni Achievement Award of Radcliffe College (Stuckey, 255). Before congress, Helen testified to improve welfare of blind people (biography.com). Helen and Annie performed on February 24, 1920 at the Palace Theater in New York City Annie talked about how she first taught Helen. Helen and Annie’s performance made them among the highest paid performers of $2,500 per week (Thompson, 95-97). Helen gave her own speech with her own voice in Montclair, New Jersey (Thompson, 95). Then she was asked to give more speeches because people liked her. Even after so many accomplishments Helen’s fame still kept rising. At 23 years old Helen’s book became a major classic of American literature and autobiographies (Shattuck, Harvard.com). The new doctor of laws stated, “From a still dark world she has brought us light and sound; our lives are richer for her faith and her example.” (Shattuck, Harvard.com). The Story of my Life and The World I Live In, both books by Helen Keller had the most revealing inside narratives of the formation of human consciousness. At her