Field Trip
Tucked not to far away from us, in Tuscumbia, Alabama, is Ivy Green, the home of Helen Keller. We decided to take a day trip to learn more about Helen Keller. Jackson had just finished Helen Keller's biography and Callie had been studying her life. It was a great time drive a few hours and see her birthplace.Ivy Green is small, and the home/museum is decorated with much of the original furniture of the Keller family. It has a number of Helen Keller's personal mementos. Plus, the tour guide was so knowledgeable... it was a wonderful tour and very insightful.
Right behind the home is the famous well, where Helen understood her first word. We got to actually go up and touch the well.
We were taken back thinking about a totally blind and deaf Helen Keller having water and signed words repeated in her hands by Anne Sullivan. The actions were repeated over and over trying to help teach her to understand. Then she understood and knew "w-a-t-e-r" meant the cool something flowing over her hand. Pretty neat to be standing in that same spot...
The tour guide told us more and more about Helen and how she was a fast learner and desired to continue learning (and more quickly than one would imagine). Not only that, we got to hear about her mischievous side... locking her mom in a closet in the home and some of the trouble she got into in her youth.It does not take long to visit Ivy Green, but it was well worth the trip. The small house and quarters were a good look into how some people lived in the late 1800s in Alabama.
Learn more about Ivy Green
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