Helen Keller grew up deaf, blind and unable to communicate in Alabama in the 1880s. Her parents were worried about how to help her until they learned of a new school for the deaf and blind in Boston. In 1887, Anne Sullivan arrived to teach Helen. After struggling to get Helen's attention, Anne taught her the manual alphabet by making hand signs for objects and having Helen feel the signs. When Helen felt the sign for "water" at a water pump, she understood the connection between the signs and objects. Helen then began naming everything and making sentences, learning to read and write through Braille. She went on to attend school and college, writing books and giving lectures to help others.