An Overview of Antique Phones: Can You Hear Me Now? - The Old Timey (2024)

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Sarah Caldwell

Antique History Savant at The Old Timey

Sarah first fell in love with vintage items after she collected her grandfather's typewriter. Ever since then, she's been hooked on buying all of the legitimate antique items she can get her hands on! Sarah hates how so much history has been lost to the world and everyone's desire for something new. She believes in the beauty of our past and loves to help people discover ways to make rustic items work in their modern-day lives.

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I’m not old enough to remember the days of party lines, buy my parents are, and I’ve heard many a story of the town gossip picking up when it wasn’t her ring, just to hear the latest juicy news.

I can only imagine what went on behind the scenes as the switchboard operator furiously routed calls by reconnecting wires, flipping switches, and pulling plugs.

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There’s something those happy faces aren’t telling you. Mainly that Helen just picked up the phone to hear that Judy’s husband lost his job, or some such rumor that will make its way through the grapevine by noon.

But what kind of phones were people picking up in their homes to listen in on these conversations? There are a lot of really cool antique phones, and watching telephones evolve is a fascinating experience.

First Phone

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Alexander Graham Bell is famous for inventing the telephone, but he wasn’t the only one to create a device allowing people to communicate with one another. He and Elisha Gray both invented liquid transmitters that could transmit speech electronically.

Luckily for Bell, he made it to the patent office just a few hours before Gray, resulting in a patent for the telephone in 1876. He first used his telephone to call his assistant into his office by saying, “Mr. Watson, come here. I want to see you.”

In early 1877, the Bell Telephone Company established telephone lines in Massachusetts between Boston and Somerville.

Candlestick Phone

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The next major evolution in telephone design came in 1890 and was popular until the 1940s. It is named such because it looks like a candlestick. It sits on a pedestal, has a mouthpiece at the top, and a separate earpiece hanging on the side.

To pick up the phone, you simply lifted the earpiece and you terminated the call by hanging it back up.

Many of us remember these, not because they were popular when we were young, but perhaps because our grandparents still had one or we’ve seen them in pictures, movies, or museums.

Early versions worked via a switch box and needed an operator to route calls, while later versions began including a rotary dial on the base that worked to route calls directly without the use of a switchboard operator.

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Candlestick phones later evolved into box phones that hung on the wall but operated in much the same way, with a microphone on the front and a receiver hanging on the side. You had to stand next to the phone to talk into it.

The candlestick model was developed in 1904. The primary manufacturers of these phones were Western Electric, which was a division of AT&T, Automatic Electric Co., Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Company, and Stromberg-Carlson.

Even after this type of phone became obsolete, companies like Crosley Radio and Radio Shack made novelty versions of them for more modern use.

Rotary Dial Phones

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The rotary dial was a major advancement in telephones because it meant that you could directly dial a phone number and reach your intended party without having to go through a switchboard operator.

No more party lines, no more operators, and no more snooping on other people’s conversations.

This type of dialing uses signaling technology known as pulse dialing. The circular design of the numbers gives each number a starting position. Rotating the dial to the finger stop indicates a different angle for each digit.

Because the dial is spring loaded, once the dial is released at the finger stop, it automatically rotates back to the starting position at which time you can select a new number and rotate it again.

Rotary dial phones first appeared in 1904, but these early versions were only used by independent telephone companies. They weren’t used with the Bell System until 1919.

Even then, they weren’t common in households until the 1950s. However, the design worked well and was around until the 1980s.

While this method was more private than using a party line, it was also very time consuming.

Their popularity began to fizzle as electronic push-button phones were released, but both were in use for a period of time.

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Because rotary dial technology was around for such a long time, it evolved with telephone design. There were early candlestick designs that had rotary dials, wall telephones with rotary dials, and more modern landline telephones with rotary dials.

The first rotary dial phone was patented by Almon Brown Strowger in 1892. While many telephone manufacturers made rotary dial phones, the rotary dial mechanism was made primarily by two different companies. Western Electric made them for the Bell System and Automatic Electric made them for everyone else.

Electronic Push-Button Phones

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The first electronic push-button phone was released in 1963 at the World’s Fair. This type of design relied on dual-tone multi-frequency technology. This pulse dialing idea would eventually become the standard, but when it was invented, telephone systems were not yet able to decode the tones.

Most telephone exchanges in the 1960s and early 1970s operated using the pulse dialing that was already popular with rotary dial telephones. Only a few private branch exchanges could support this electronic push-button dialing.

The first push-button system was created by Bell Telephone, but companies in the UK like Marconi-Elliott, Pye TMC, and GEC quickly followed.

As telephone systems began to support this type of electronic dialing, other phone manufacturers like Western Digital and Kellogg began to produce them, too.

It wouldn’t be until the 1980s, when AT&T (one of the major monopolies in the telephone industry) agreed to dissolve its antitrust and divide into seven different companies and allow other manufacturers to develop telephones.

Designer Phones in the 1980s

These days, retro nostalgia is all the rage, and the designs of the 1980s have come back in full force. I wouldn’t call these phones antiques, but I would say they’re highly collectible.

Memorable designs include the following:

Other novelty and collector phones include:

Pay phones

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Believe it or not, the first pay phones started popping up in Chicago in 1889. The idea of a prepaid phone that you could use wherever you were grew in popularity rather rapidly, and by 1902, there were over 80,000 in the United States.

In 1960, there were one million, and at the peak of payphone use, there were more than two million of them across the country. However, with the rise of personal cell phone use, the number of payphones in 2018 was only about 100,000. Many of them are no longer supported.

Quite a few different manufacturers supported these coin operated pay phones, including AT&T and many other private companies. AT&T stopped supporting their pay phone service in 2009, and the others followed one by one throughout the next ten years.

Pay phones were a huge part of pop culture. They were found on every street corner and in almost every movie and TV show. They’re a novelty item today and it’s rare and exciting to see one in person, especially if it’s still operational.

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One of the most iconic pay phone designs is the telephone booth found on street corners in England. Many of these still stand and are a huge tourist attraction for those who visit, despite the fact that they are no longer operational. Many have been replicated or transplanted, and can be found all over the world.

Final Thoughts

There are a lot of other significant developments in the life of the telephone including car phones, personal cell phones, flip phones, and the first smartphones.

We started out the 20th century with Bell Telephone (which eventually became AT&T) having a monopoly on the manufacturing of phones. In the 1980s, AT&T divided and we ended up with dozens of telephone companies.

We seem to have come full circle now with the major carriers merging back together. Throughout the journey there have been plenty of beautiful and interesting designs, many of which we simply didn’t have time to cover here.

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An Overview of Antique Phones: Can You Hear Me Now? - The Old Timey (2024)

FAQs

What is an old Timey phone called? ›

A candlestick telephone is also often referred to as a desk stand, an upright, or a stick phone. Candlestick telephones featured a mouthpiece (transmitter) mounted at the top of the stand, and a receiver (earphone) that was held by the user to the ear during a call.

What did the oldest phone look like? ›

The first telephone had two parts: a transmitter and a receiver. The transmitter comprised three parts—a drumlike device (a cylinder with a covered end), a needle, and a battery. The covered end of the drumlike device was attached to the needle.

What did phones look like in 1890? ›

In the 1890s a new smaller style of telephone was introduced, the candlestick telephone, and it was packaged in three parts. The transmitter stood on a stand, known as a "candlestick" for its shape.

What are the parts of the old timey phone? ›

Basic, old-fashioned telephones are very simple devices. They only contain a few parts: a microphone, an earpiece, a switch in the base of the phone, and wires.

What was the 1930s phone called? ›

When Ericsson's Bakelite telephone was first distributed world-wide in the 1930s it was called the Swedish type of telephone and set the standard for how a modern plastic telephone should look.

What did phones look like in 1920? ›

1920s. Telephones in the '20s typically had a separate mouthpiece and receiver. The design was known as the candlestick design and newer versions had a dial on the front so a person could call numbers directly.

What are old school phones called? ›

The oldest telephones with dials are normally called rotary dial phones, because the dial was a spinning disc which quickly interrupted the phone circuit to indicate the dialed number. It seems odd, but tone dialing phones qualify as “old,” in fact almost 60 years in service as I write this.

What is the oldest phone number still in use? ›

The number is now written as 1-212-736-5000. According to the hotel's website, PEnnsylvania 6-5000 is New York's oldest continually assigned telephone number and possibly the oldest continuously-assigned number in the world.

Why did old telephones have letters on the dial? ›

The letters were used to dial the telephone exchange. For instance, my home phone number as a child was WHitehall 2–0785. Whitehall was our exchange. So, one would dial the “W” and then the “H” before proceeding to dial the numerics.

How valuable are old phones? ›

Some antique phones are highly collectible and can fetch thousands of dollars, while others may only be worth a few hundred dollars or less. It's best to consult with antiques dealers or auction houses to get a better idea of a specific antique phone's worth.

What was the 1st cell phone? ›

The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X was the first handheld cellular phone that allowed people to make longer distance calls than just a landline phone. It did not require any lines or cords to be attached to make a call. The first ever cellular phone call was made in 1973, using this phone, by Dr. Martin Cooper.

How much did a telephone cost in the 1800s? ›

The cost of having a telephone in the 1880s was $3 a month. The Exchange, another phone company in Ithaca, supplied all instruments and lines and maintained the service. There was something of a war between telephone companies, beginning in 1881 with the development of the People's Telephone Co.

Did we have phones 100 years ago? ›

By 1900 there were nearly 600,000 phones in Bell's telephone system; that number shot up to 2.2 million phones by 1905, and 5.8 million by 1910. In 1915 the transcontinental telephone line began operating. By 1907, AT&T had a near monopoly on phone and telegraph service, thanks to its purchase of Western Union.

What were phones called in the 1800s? ›

In fact, the first iteration of the telephone was called the “teletrophono,” and was created in 1860 by Italian inventor, Antonio Meucci. Meucci began working on his design as early as 1849 and filed a caveat (an official notice that someone would be filing an official patent at a later date) in 1871.

What is another name for a throwaway phone? ›

A burner phone, or burner, is an inexpensive mobile phone designed for temporary, sometimes anonymous, use, after which it may be discarded.

What was the 1960s phone called? ›

Although push-button touch-tone telephones made their debut to the general public in 1963, the rotary dial telephone still was common for many years.

What was the 80s cell phone called? ›

The DynaTAC is a series of cellular telephones manufactured by Motorola from 1983 to 1994. The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X received approval from the U.S. FCC on September 21, 1983. A full charge took roughly 10 hours, and it offered 30 minutes of talk time.

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