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trof

(54,256 posts)
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 07:57 PM Dec 2018

I remember when there was one telephone in the house.

I wasn't the old candlestick phone, but a modern one with the speaker and receiver in the one hand-piece. It was black and had a dial, of course.

It sat on a special little seat and table combo in the hall.

Our phone number was 71353.
It was a party line that we shared with another subscriber.
Our signal was one long and two short rings.
I think the other party was two longs.
Still, it was fun and a bit daring to pick up on the two longs and eavesdrop.

When my grandmother needed a phone number she'd say to me "Honey, call Central and ask for Vincent's market's phone number."
I didn't know what 'Central' was, but I knew you just dialed 'O' and asked the lady to look up a number.

That's my reminiscence for Christmas eve which has nothing whatsoever to do with Christmas eve.
Merry Christmas.

trof

43 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I remember when there was one telephone in the house. (Original Post) trof Dec 2018 OP
I am really old I pre-date the dial phone. I think there were 8 doc03 Dec 2018 #1
Mayberry trof Dec 2018 #2
I remember visiting a relative somewhere in West Virginia. They had what they called the farmers doc03 Dec 2018 #14
When we got a phone it was an 8 party line. Our ring was one long ring. Arkansas Granny Dec 2018 #7
Melrose - 2786 lapfog_1 Jan 2019 #26
Melrose was the exchange for Martins Ferry, Ohio where I went to doc03 Jan 2019 #43
Our party line had 7 families on it. Ferrets are Cool Dec 2018 #3
Ours was also a party line. Remember when reception was so lousy for long distance calls tblue37 Dec 2018 #4
Oh yeah. A long distance call was a BIG DEAL! trof Dec 2018 #5
In my family, it was two rings. NanceGreggs Dec 2018 #9
Great story. trof Dec 2018 #20
Cool story! Lithos Jan 2019 #35
We did the 2 rings, too. nt tblue37 Jan 2019 #42
Hi, Carl! MyOwnPeace Dec 2018 #10
My boy friend and I did that same sort of thing too with arranging dates by coded messages. northoftheborder Dec 2018 #18
Yeah-the operators were definitely on to that scam! Lol! Alliepoo Dec 2018 #15
Trust me, the operators were on to you. PoindexterOglethorpe Jan 2019 #25
I called my high school FES lapfog_1 Jan 2019 #28
What does FES mean? NBachers Jan 2019 #37
Foreign Exchange Student lapfog_1 Jan 2019 #39
We had a party line too Zoonart Jan 2019 #33
21987! akraven Dec 2018 #6
Yes, one phone in the house, three families on the party line. NT enough Dec 2018 #8
Our phone number began with 2 letters marked50 Dec 2018 #11
Yep lillypaddle Dec 2018 #24
we had this one KT2000 Dec 2018 #12
We had that phone too! blaze Dec 2018 #21
Oh, yeah, you could drop those suckers on the floor and not break them. brush Jan 2019 #32
I remember making a long distance call way back. Sneederbunk Dec 2018 #13
I still remember our old phone # Ohiogal Dec 2018 #16
MAyflower 3-5649. Southern Ohio Laurian Dec 2018 #17
When I was a 'ute, we had the candle stick. Around 1952, dial phones came in. I was in 7th grade. 3Hotdogs Dec 2018 #19
Temple 2 dweller Dec 2018 #22
We has two when I was growing up. One in the living room and one in my parents' bedroom. worstexever Dec 2018 #23
I recIg ently read a novel in which people in the 1950s called PoindexterOglethorpe Jan 2019 #27
I can remember, as kids, gathering around to watch Dad make rare long distance calls. NBachers Jan 2019 #38
We had a wall phone in the kitchen and another phone in the parents' bedroom. The Velveteen Ocelot Jan 2019 #29
My earliest recollection of our phone was a party line. House of Roberts Jan 2019 #30
My grandmother's sister ran the switchboard for her neck of the woods. applegrove Jan 2019 #31
Even more of a hoot was the Phone book at the time. Wellstone ruled Jan 2019 #34
Higate 2600 demosincebirth Jan 2019 #36
We had a combo table and seat in the hall also, with the phone on top. secondwind Jan 2019 #40
our number was 4491 rurallib Jan 2019 #41

doc03

(35,332 posts)
1. I am really old I pre-date the dial phone. I think there were 8
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:02 PM
Dec 2018

people on our party line we had 1 long 1 short. The operator knew everyone's business.

doc03

(35,332 posts)
14. I remember visiting a relative somewhere in West Virginia. They had what they called the farmers
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 09:42 PM
Dec 2018

line with a crank phone, the wires were strung on the fence posts from one farm to the other.

Arkansas Granny

(31,516 posts)
7. When we got a phone it was an 8 party line. Our ring was one long ring.
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:25 PM
Dec 2018

We only heard the ring of our party opposite, which was two short rings. Since we visited back and forth with that family, we could still answer our calls even if we weren't home.


doc03

(35,332 posts)
43. Melrose was the exchange for Martins Ferry, Ohio where I went to
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 04:39 PM
Jan 2019

High School? Later became (633).

Ferrets are Cool

(21,106 posts)
3. Our party line had 7 families on it.
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:06 PM
Dec 2018

It would be so hard to go back and live 50 years ago. But....I WOULD DAMN WELL DO IT IF I COULD FIX SOME OF THE MISTAKES I MADE.

tblue37

(65,340 posts)
4. Ours was also a party line. Remember when reception was so lousy for long distance calls
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:08 PM
Dec 2018

that everyone had to be super quiet and not make any noise in the house?

trof

(54,256 posts)
5. Oh yeah. A long distance call was a BIG DEAL!
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:15 PM
Dec 2018

Sue! It's LONG DISTANCE! FOR YOU!

And the ways we scammed it.
To let my mother know I'd safely arrived in another city I'd place a call to 'Carl' at our number.
Mom would answer and say "There's no Carl at this number.", but now she knew I'd arrived safe and sound. No charge.
I think the operators may have been on to this scam.

NanceGreggs

(27,814 posts)
9. In my family, it was two rings.
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:31 PM
Dec 2018

When you arrived somewhere safely, you'd call home, let it ring twice, and then hang up. Of course, this meant that if someone in the household was traveling, you weren't allowed to answer the phone until it had rung three times.

My mother was still insistent that I do this after I moved to Toronto, and she was still in NY. Her last words to me, every time she dropped me at the airport, were: "Two rings."

I had mentioned this to a friend many years ago. He later moved from Toronto to Vancouver, and I wished him a safe journey, as he was driving across the country. A few days after he left, I got an email from him. All it said was: Two rings.

MyOwnPeace

(16,926 posts)
10. Hi, Carl!
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:37 PM
Dec 2018

I used to call "collect" to home, asking for ME. Mom or Dad would answer and say that I wasn't there. I would then say that I would call at 7:00 - and the folks would know that I would be getting back into town and home at 7:00!
Yoy, the stuff we did to survive in college!

northoftheborder

(7,572 posts)
18. My boy friend and I did that same sort of thing too with arranging dates by coded messages.
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 11:49 PM
Dec 2018

He was out of town for the summer, and long distance was expensive.

Alliepoo

(2,216 posts)
15. Yeah-the operators were definitely on to that scam! Lol!
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 09:54 PM
Dec 2018

I was a local, long distance and international operator for good ole Ma Bell for quite a few years. Directory assistance, too. It was a fun, crazy job.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,855 posts)
25. Trust me, the operators were on to you.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 02:47 AM
Jan 2019

But we couldn't challenge you on that scam.

I was a long distance operator back in the day, and we always recognized that scam. We hated it, but had no way to stop it.

lapfog_1

(29,199 posts)
28. I called my high school FES
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 02:53 AM
Jan 2019

after she returned to her home in Norway.

My parents wanted to kill me.

Zoonart

(11,861 posts)
33. We had a party line too
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 03:22 AM
Jan 2019

The phone was on a table with a short bench in the hallway. We were to pass on messages as kids, and not engage in lengthy conversation.

Finally got a "princess" phone in my room at age 16. It was a BIG deal.

marked50

(1,366 posts)
11. Our phone number began with 2 letters
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:47 PM
Dec 2018

like Ni8-4776-referred to as "Niagara". Also Long distance calls were made at my fathers place of employment on the weekends over the "watts" line.

lillypaddle

(9,580 posts)
24. Yep
Sat Dec 29, 2018, 02:42 PM
Dec 2018

my number was JA (jackson) whatever. Geez, it really doesn't seem that long ago. Now I'm made fun of for having a flip phone.

KT2000

(20,577 posts)
12. we had this one
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 08:47 PM
Dec 2018

before an upgrade. I can't imagine how they ended up with this one because we moved into the house in 1952. The handset was really heavy too.

Sneederbunk

(14,290 posts)
13. I remember making a long distance call way back.
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 09:01 PM
Dec 2018

You would give Central the LD number and hang up. After multiple connections, Central would call you back so you could speak to whom you were calling.

Laurian

(2,593 posts)
17. MAyflower 3-5649. Southern Ohio
Mon Dec 24, 2018, 11:26 PM
Dec 2018

That number rolls right off my tongue. Isn’t it amazing that we remember these numbers we haven’t used for at least half a century?

3Hotdogs

(12,375 posts)
19. When I was a 'ute, we had the candle stick. Around 1952, dial phones came in. I was in 7th grade.
Tue Dec 25, 2018, 12:51 AM
Dec 2018

We had an assembly program where the prop was a large phone -- several feet across. Guy from Bell Tel was on stage showing how the dial would spin and how to make a call.

===========

Fast forward, 1964, New York World's Fair.

My uncle was living in California, seeking his fortune. Bell Tell set up a demonstration of the phone of the future, video telephone. The phone line was connected between the fair and Disneyland. Anyone who was on either end could talk to whoever was on the other end - no charge. So we agreed to coordinate on a given Sunday. Probably 20 of us got on the train in N.J., took the train to Hoboken where we got on the ferry and then switched to subway to get to the fairgrounds. We got to SEE and speak with Uncle Bob for about 1/2 hour. The attendant valued the call at about $2K.

Damn. That was some shit and we were proud of ourselves. After that, the next stop was the Lowenbrau pavilion where they served room temperature draft Lowenbrau in large mugs.

========

2nd fast forward, mid 1980's. There was a strike of long distance telephone operators. My friend Ken, was a mid level employee at Bell Labs in Murray Hill, N.J. He, along with many of his colleagues were flown to Tennessee where they were given quick lessons on how to process long distance calls. One of the stories he told about his exploits still strikes me funny today.

Ken: "Long distance, may I help you?"

Patron: "I'd like to place a person to person call to Irk ____, in ____, Wisconsin."

K: "Irk?"

P: "Yes, Irk."

K: "Please spell the first name"

P: "Eric."

K: "Oh, Eric."

P: "Yes, Irk."

=======

K: "I have a person to person call from xxx to Eric ___. Is Eric available?"

Home resident: "From who?"

K: "From Eric."

H.R.: "Who?"

K: "Irk."

H.R.: "Oh, Irk., yeah, he's here."

dweller

(23,632 posts)
22. Temple 2
Tue Dec 25, 2018, 04:08 PM
Dec 2018

9024 ... the 1st # of my childhood phone, have never forgotten it,

and yet for my present cell#, and one I had for 15yrs previously, can't remember dozens of others I've had thru the years...
the 15 yr # was xxx-3886, and my best friend's was xxx-6883... numerous times I rattled off his # to people asking for mine, he'd get calls for me and said to me
"they must have dialed wrong" and I realized I had probably just spouted #s that sounded right to me...
😜

✌🏼️

worstexever

(265 posts)
23. We has two when I was growing up. One in the living room and one in my parents' bedroom.
Wed Dec 26, 2018, 03:26 AM
Dec 2018

I remember a friend's phone number was Ivanhoe something...

I spent long evening hours in my parents' bedroom listening to the radio and talking on the phone.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(25,855 posts)
27. I recIg ently read a novel in which people in the 1950s called
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 02:52 AM
Jan 2019

long distance rather casually, including calls from England to the United States. I found that aspect of the novel unbelievable and frustrating, because I recall all too well how rarely people called long distance in the 1960s. It was expensive and a huge big deal gto make a long distance call back then. Unfortunately. people born in more recent decades simply don't understand.

NBachers

(17,108 posts)
38. I can remember, as kids, gathering around to watch Dad make rare long distance calls.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 04:56 AM
Jan 2019

He used his "official" voice when speaking with the operator.

The Velveteen Ocelot

(115,686 posts)
29. We had a wall phone in the kitchen and another phone in the parents' bedroom.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 03:02 AM
Jan 2019

The bedroom phone was usually off-limits. But the kitchen phone had a long cord that made it possible for me to have semi-private conversations by crawling into a small broom closet with the handset and pulling the door closed as far as I could. However, if I was yakking too long a parent would pick up the bedroom extension and set it down again with an audible click to let me know my time was up, and I was to get out of the broom closet and hang up the phone. The good ol' days...

House of Roberts

(5,169 posts)
30. My earliest recollection of our phone was a party line.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 03:10 AM
Jan 2019

My dad's boss (living across the road from us) shared the line. His teenage daughter stayed on it all the time. We probably got our own line by 1960-61 (I would have been five).

I have just one phone now, but it's a hand me down Iphone.

applegrove

(118,642 posts)
31. My grandmother's sister ran the switchboard for her neck of the woods.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 03:11 AM
Jan 2019

It was in her house. It was convenient because my grandmother's husband was the country doctor for miles around. Everyone it seemed played a role in the countryside. Of course she had to stick around to be there to answer it.

 

Wellstone ruled

(34,661 posts)
34. Even more of a hoot was the Phone book at the time.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 03:34 AM
Jan 2019

In my small Village,the folks who did have a phone were listed with their phone numbers. The Stores and Business as the local Doctor on Main Street numbers started with 1 and worked their way up to something like 30. And from there came the House phone numbers. And those were all party lines. Don't recall anyone using a number,two rings on the wall phone and Molly to operator just asked who you wanted and that was it. Still remember my mother Rubber Necking on the phone form time to time. Especially on Tuesday,Wednesday was Ladies Aide day at the Church,all the ladies had to make sure no one brought the same dish for lunch,if you know what I mean.

Do remember Long Distance was a high priced item back in the day. Again,if you worked the Operator,Molly or Maude,you could finagle it for free. First dial phones came in about 1956 and do remember the Rotary phone cost a dollar a month and was supplied by the local Bell Company plus three dollars for the service.

secondwind

(16,903 posts)
40. We had a combo table and seat in the hall also, with the phone on top.
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 07:59 AM
Jan 2019

I still have a photograph of my smiling mom with her legs crossed and the phone in her ear. One of my favorite pictures of her.

rurallib

(62,413 posts)
41. our number was 4491
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 09:41 AM
Jan 2019

Something I had to have well memorized before starting school.

My mother had a twin sister in Phoenix, we lived in Iowa. Phone calls were once a month, well scripted and had to be placed after 7PM to get the evening rate.

They would last about 5 minutes with each of the kids getting @ ten seconds to talk to their aunt. Even with all the ways they tried to cut the cost of the call it would still cost about $7, which was a simply huge expense for both families.

By the time I was old enough to know, we had a private line. Some of my friends in the country still had no number, just a ring number and a party line.

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