In this gallery you can hear voices from the 1880s. Featured here is the only known recording of Alexander Graham Bell, created in 1885. “Hear my voice,” Bell declares, from a time when listening to recorded sound was not today’s commonplace, but an amazing new experience.
Bell’s contemporary Thomas Edison had invented the phonograph in 1877, and, with it, a whole new kind of content-rich document: the sound recording. Never before had sounds been stored and then heard again.
A treasure trove of experimental recordings from Bell’s laboratory, preserved but silent for over a century, survives at the Smithsonian. Thanks to a technology developed only a decade ago, the content of some of those records can now be heard. In the process, we have gained a new way to understand the past—not just by looking at documents, but also by listening to them.
Explore this exhibition:
- Picturing Sound: Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville (1817–1879)
- Studying Sound: Alexander Graham Bell (1847–1922)
- Replaying Sound: Thomas Edison (1847–1931)
- The Volta Laboratory Association
- Sound Experiments at the Volta Laboratory
- The Volta Laboratory’s Legacy
- The Volta Laboratory and the Smithsonian
- Recovering Sounds to Preserve the Past
- Recovering Sounds with IRENE
- Resources
- Acknowledgments
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