- June 27, 1880
- Helen Keller is born to Captain Arthur Henley Keller and Kate Adams Keller at Ivy Green in Tuscumbia, Alabama.
- February 1882
- After being struck by illness, Helen loses both her sight and hearing. No definitive diagnosis of the disease is ever determined.
- Summer 1886
- The Keller family meets with Dr. Alexander Graham Bell, who recommends contacting Michael Anagnos, director of Perkins Institution for the Blind in Boston. Captain Keller writes to Anagnos, requesting a teacher for Helen. Anagnos contacts his star pupil and valedictorian, Anne Mansfield Sullivan.
- March 3, 1887
- Anne Sullivan arrives in Tuscumbia and begins teaching Helen manual sign language.
- April 5, 1887
- Anne makes the “miracle” breakthrough, teaching Helen that “everything had a name,” by spelling W-A-T-E-R into Helen’s hand as water from the family’s water pump flows over their hands.
- May 1888
- Anne, Helen, and Kate Keller travel north, visiting Alexander Graham Bell, and meeting President Grover Cleveland at the White House, and visiting Anagnos at Perkins Institution.
- Fall 1889
- Anne and Helen return to Perkins, where Helen is considered a “guest” of the school.
- November 1891
- Helen sends Anagnos the story “The Frost King” as a birthday present. She is accused of plagiarism. By 1894, Anagnos had broken off his relationship with Helen and Anne.
- October 1894
- Helen and Anne travel to New York City, where Helen attends the Wright-Humason School for the Deaf.
- August 19, 1896
- Helen’s father, Captain Keller, dies.
- Fall 1896
- Helen becomes a devout Swedenborgian.
- October 1896
- Helen is accepted as a pupil at the Cambridge School for Young Ladies, in preparation for attendance at Harvard’s annex for women, Radcliffe College.
- December 1897
- Helen and Anne leave the Cambridge School and move to Wrentham, Massachusetts. Helen continues her college preparatory studies with the assistance of private tutors.
- July 4, 1899
- Helen receives her certificate of admission to Radcliffe College.
- September 1900
- Helen becomes a member of the freshman class of 1904 at Radcliffe.
- March 1903
- With the help of editor John Albert Macy, Helen writes The Story of My Life.
- Spring 1904
- Helen and Anne buy a home on seven acres of land in Wrentham.
- June 28, 1904
- Helen becomes the first deaf-blind individual to receive a bachelor of arts degree, graduating cum laude from Radcliffe.
- May 3, 1905
- Anne marries John Macy at Wrentham.
- July 1908
- Helen writes and publishes The World I Live In.
- Spring, 1909
- Helen and John Macy join the Socialist Party of Massachusetts, and Helen becomes a suffragist.
- January 1913
- Helen and Anne begin their career on the lecture circuit, which is to last more than 50 years. Helen writes and publishes Out of the Dark, a collection of socialist writings.
- 1914
- John Macy leaves Anne, though they never officially divorce.
- October 1914
- Polly Thomson joins Helen and Anne’s household.
- November 1916
- Peter Fagan, John Macy’s assistant, proposes to Helen, and they take out a marriage license in Boston. Helen’s mother forces her to publicly renounce her engagemen. Helen is sent to Montgomery, Alabama, to visit family, while Anne and Polly travel to Lake Placid and Puerto Rico in hopes of aiding Anne’s failing health.
- October 1917
- Helen and Anne sell their farm in Wrentham and move with Polly to Forest Hills, New York.
- May 1918
- Deliverance, a silent film based on Helen’s life, is produced.
- February 1920
- Helen and Anne begin their vaudeville career.
- June 1921
- Helen’s mother, Kate Keller, dies.
- October 1924
- Helen and Anne begin their work with the American Foundation for the Blind.
- June 1925
- Helen makes an appeal before the International Convention of Lions Clubs, asking the Lions to become “Knights of the Blind.”
- October 1927
- My Religion, Helen’s account of her Swedenborgian beliefs, is published.
- Spring 1929
- Midstream, an autobiographical account of Helen’s later life, is published.
- April 1930
- Helen, Anne, and Polly travel abroad for the first time, visiting Scotland, Ireland and England for over six months.
- April 1931
- Helen, Anne, and Polly participate in the first World Council for the Blind.
- August 1931
- Helen, Anne, and Polly travel to France and Yugoslavia.
- May 1932
- The women make a third trip abroad, visiting Scotland and England.
- August 26, 1932
- John Macy dies in Pennsylvania.
- December 1932
- Helen is elected to AFB’s board of trustees.
- June 1933
- Helen, Anne and Polly return to Scotland.
- October 20, 1936
- Anne Sullivan Macy dies.
- November 1936
- Helen and Polly travel abroad, visiting England, Scotland, and France.
- April 1937
- Helen and Polly travel to Japan, Korea, and Manchuria.
- Spring 1938
- Helen Keller’s Journal, a personal account of Helen’s life in 1936 and 1937, is published.
- September 1939
- Helen sells her home in Forest Hills, and the household moves to Arcan Ridge in Westport, Connecticut.
- January 1943
- Helen begins her visits to the blinded, deaf, and disabled soldiers of World War II in military hospitals around the country. She calls this “the crowning experience of my life.”
- October 1946
- Helen and Polly make their first world tour for the American Foundation for the Overseas Blind (AFOB) , AFB’s sister organization, visiting London, Paris, Italy, Greece, and Scotland. In the next 11 years, they would visit 35 countries on five continents.
- November 1946
- A fire destroys Arcan Ridge, along with almost all of the household’s possessions.
- September 1947
- The household moves into Arcan Ridge 2, an almost identical replica of the original Arcan Ridge home.
- April-August 1948
- Helen and Polly begin a tour of Australia and New Zealand as representatives of the AFOB. When they reach Japan, Polly suffers her first stroke, and the remainder of the tour is canceled.
- Spring 1950-Spring 1953
- Helen and Polly continue to travel all over the world, including Europe, South Africa., the Middle East, and Latin America.
- Winter 1953
- A documentary film of Helen’s life, The Unconquered (later renamed Helen Keller in Her Story), is released.
- February 1955
- Helen and Polly embark on a tour of the Far East, including India and Japan.
- June 1955
- Helen receives an honorary degree from Harvard University, the first woman to be so honored.
- December 1955
- Teacher, Helen’s biography about Anne Sullivan Macy, is published.
- Spring 1956
- The Unconquered wins an Academy Award for best feature length documentary of 1955.
- November 1956
- Helen makes peace with Perkins Institution, attending the dedication of “Keller-Macy Cottage.”
- Winter 1956-57
- William Gibson’s play The Miracle Worker, based on Helen’s early life with Anne, debuts on television and on Broadway.
- May 1957
- Helen and Polly tour Iceland and Scandinavia.
- March 21, 1960
- Polly Thomson dies.
- October 1961
- Helen suffers her first stroke and retires from public life.
- September 1964
- President Lyndon Johnson confers the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, upon Helen. She is unable to attend the ceremony.
- June 1, 1968
- Helen Keller passes away in her sleep. Over 1,200 mourners attend the funeral at the National Cathedral. Helen’s ashes are interred there with those of Anne and Polly.
From To Love This Life: Quotations by Helen Keller. Copyright © 2000 AFB Press, American Foundation for the Blind. All rights reserved.
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