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The First Telephone Call

Antique Telephone

Did you know that the very first phone call was made on March 10, 1876? By today’s standards it was a short call over a short distance. Alexander Graham Bell and his assistant, Thomas A. Watson, were literally just down the hall from each other in a Boston machine shop. The message was a single sentence, “Watson come here, I want you!”

That was 125 years ago and a very different world than today! The electric light was barely used and cars hadn’t been invented! People wrote letters, or in an emergency sent a telegram. Letters took days or weeks to arrive depending on how far they had to travel. To send a telegram someone would have to go to the telegraph office, sometimes hundreds of miles away, and compose a very short message because they were charged a high price for each word. For the same reasons, news wasn’t immediate like it is now.

With no phone to call in the facts, it took 12 days for the news of General George Custer’s defeat by the Sioux Indians at the Bighorn to be delivered to the American public. A scout had to ride 300 miles from the battlefield to Stillwater, Montana, and then on to Salt Lake City to the closest telegraph office. The dispatch arrived in New York, was transcribed in longhand and then delivered on foot to the New York Times. Quite a process compared to picking up the phone and reporting events as they are happening!

The word “telephone” comes from the Greek meaning “far speaking”. At first, however, “far” only meant as far as your local community. Usually the first ones in town to have a phone were the doctor and the pharmacist because their calls were important to people’s well being. Many pharmacists let their customers make free phone calls, making their drugstore a community gathering place.

By 1880, just four years after the first phone call, there were over 60,000 phones in America. Making a call though, was different than it is today. You would pick up the receiver, speak into the phone and tell the operator the name of the person you wanted to talk to. There was no direct dialing because there were no phone numbers. There were no telephone directories. The operators knew everyone in town who had a phone and how to connect callers.

At first phone operators were boys, but many of them were rowdy, shooting spit wads and rubber bands, wrestling and sometimes being rude to the customers. It wasn’t long before they were replaced with young women who were friendlier and less troublesome.

Customers had the best ideas to improve the phone system. When a yellow fever epidemic hit Lowell, Massachusetts, the local doctor became alarmed. What if all four of the town’s operators were sick at once? How could replacement operators memorize the names of the town’s 200 customers and properly route the emergency calls? The doctor came up with a solution. Replace names with numbers. A caller could now request a number rather than a name, allowing the operator to connect without knowing the exact name and matching location of everyone in town.

An undertaker, who believed the operators were diverting his business to competitors, invented the dial telephone and an automatic switchboard. Callers could dial the number they wanted themselves and be connected by a mechanical switchboard. Operators would no longer be needed for everyday calls.

The demand for telephones soared! People wanted to call relatives and friends anywhere in the country! In 1892, the invention of a signal amplifier made it possible to connect New York with Chicago, a distance of 600 miles!

The next big project was to create a direct line from New York to San Francisco. This job was as big as building the transcontinental railroad! Thousands of workers fanned out across America on foot and horseback encountering every kind of terrain from mountain to desert. They worked for a full year braving storms, lightening, blizzards and sweltering heat. It took 14,000 miles of copper wire and 130,000 telephone poles to link the East coast with the West coast!

Finally, on January 25, 1915, (39 years after the first telephone call), the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell, now in New York, called his partner Thomas Watson in San Francisco. With everybody watching, they wanted to make absolutely sure nothing went wrong. They hired 15,000 men, 5 for every mile of telephone wire, and spaced them out across the nation, ready to fix any problem that would arise. The two old friends, Bell and Watson, chatted for 23 minutes. They made history and their invention, the telephone, changed America and eventually the world, forever. “Far speaking” became a reality, condensing time and distance for everyone.

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