Franklin School commemoration In 1947, the Pioneers Chapters, then called Telephone Pioneers of America, celebrated the centenary of the birth of
Alexander Graham Bell with banquets and other events. They also dedicated a plaque on the wall of the
Franklin School at 13th & K Streets NW in Washington, D.C., honoring Bell's invention of the
Photophone, the precursor of
fibre-optical communications, and which he referred to as his'' 'greatest invention'.'' The plaque read: :''"From the top floor of this building • Was sent on June 3, 1880 • Over a beam of light to 1325 'L' Street • The first wireless telephone message • In the history of the world. • The apparatus used in sending the message • Was the Photophone invented by • Alexander Graham Bell • inventor of the telephone • This plaque was placed here by • Alexander Graham Bell Chapter • Telephone Pioneers of America..."''.
Bell statue by Cleeve Horne In June 1949, the
Charles Fleetford Sise Chapter of the Telephone Pioneers commissioned and dedicated a large statue of Bell in the front portico of
Brantford, Ontario's new Bell Telephone Building plant on Market Street. Attending the formal ceremony were Bell's daughter, Mrs. Gillbert Grosvenor,
Frederick Johnson, President of the
Bell Telephone Company of Canada, T.N. Lacy, President of the Telephone Pioneers, and Brantford Mayor Walter J. Dowden. The statue had been designed and crafted by
A.E. Cleeve Horne in his Toronto studio, and cast in bronze in
Corona, New York by Salvatore Schiavo. On each side of the monument is the engraved inscription, "In Grateful Recognition of the Inventor of the Telephone". The statue has been likened in style to the
Lincoln Memorial statue in Washington, D.C., by
Daniel Chester French. The dedication of the Bell statue was broadcast nationally by the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
Thomas Philip Henderson On June 12, 1954 approximately 30 officers and several dozen members of the Pioneers paid homage to a former and original telephone pioneer, Reverend Thomas Philip Henderson, at
Perth, Ontario's Elmwood Cemetery. The Telephone Pioneers who attended were principally from the 7,900-member division of the Pioneer's
Charles Fleetford Sise Chapter in Ontario and Quebec, attending a three-day conference in the city where Henderson was interred after his death in 1887. Approximately 200 Pioneers and other dignitaries attended the graveside memorial service where a plaque in Henderson's memory was unveiled, which was also attended by his great-granddaughter. In 1870
Alexander Melville Bell immigrated to Canada with his wife, his ailing son
Alexander Graham Bell (wasting from tuberculosis) and his widowed daughter-in-law. After landing at
Quebec City on 1 August 1870, the Bells boarded a train to
Montreal and later to
Paris, Ontario, to stay at the parsonage of the Reverend Thomas Philip Henderson, a Baptist minister and close family friend who likely went to school with Melville in Scotland. After a brief stay of only a few days with Rev. Henderson, the Bell family purchased a farmhouse and orchard of 5 hectares (13 acres) on the outskirts of
Brantford, Ontario, for $2,600, which is now the
Bell Homestead National Historic Site. The Bells were likely helped in their search by the advance efforts of Reverend Henderson. ==See also==