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[email protected] April 10th 12 08:25 PM

1951 original Direct Distance Dialing trial
 
(UK added due to their interest in this subject).

There was a prior conversation about area code assignment.

In November 1951 Englewood NJ got the first Direct Distance Dialing
for plain station-to-station calls. Locations dialable were limited
to the following locations. For cities, it was generally the city
only and perhaps a few adjacent suburbs, not the whole metropolitan
area. The cities below represent only nine states and only a small
portion of the states.

New Jersey--central and northern only, not southern
New York City (dial 11)
Nassau County (western) 516
Westchester County, NY (lower) 914
Boston 617 (includes suburbs)
Chicago 312
Cleveland 216
Detroit 313
Milwaukee 414
Oakland 415
Philadelphia 215
Pittsburgh 402
Providence 401
Sacramento 916
San Francisco 318

Note that some of the exchanges dialable were still served by manual
switchboards. When such a manual exchange was dialed, a special
display lit up for the inward "B" operator showing the desired number
and she plugged in accordingly.


As mentioned, a considerable part of making DDD available was giving
everyone a dialable seven digit local phone number that was unique
within an area code. Further, people in small towns with four or five
digit numbers would continue to dial those numbers for local calls.

Step offices would require dialing an access code of three digits.

Also needed to be implemented was automatic routing and automatic
message accounting (AMA). Some calls would be handled by a separate
toll switch.

Coordination was needed with Independent companies.


[email protected] April 10th 12 09:11 PM

1951 original Direct Distance Dialing trial
 
On 10/04/2012 21:25, wrote:
(UK added due to their interest in this subject).

There was a prior conversation about area code assignment.

In November 1951 Englewood NJ got the first Direct Distance Dialing
for plain station-to-station calls. Locations dialable were limited
to the following locations. For cities, it was generally the city
only and perhaps a few adjacent suburbs, not the whole metropolitan
area. The cities below represent only nine states and only a small
portion of the states.

New Jersey--central and northern only, not southern
New York City (dial 11)
Nassau County (western) 516
Westchester County, NY (lower) 914
Boston 617 (includes suburbs)
Chicago 312
Cleveland 216
Detroit 313
Milwaukee 414
Oakland 415
Philadelphia 215
Pittsburgh 402
Providence 401
Sacramento 916
San Francisco 318

Note that some of the exchanges dialable were still served by manual
switchboards. When such a manual exchange was dialed, a special
display lit up for the inward "B" operator showing the desired number
and she plugged in accordingly.


As mentioned, a considerable part of making DDD available was giving
everyone a dialable seven digit local phone number that was unique
within an area code. Further, people in small towns with four or five
digit numbers would continue to dial those numbers for local calls.

Step offices would require dialing an access code of three digits.

Also needed to be implemented was automatic routing and automatic
message accounting (AMA). Some calls would be handled by a separate
toll switch.

Coordination was needed with Independent companies.


New York City would have been 212, rather than 11, would it have not?

Richard J.[_3_] April 10th 12 10:48 PM

1951 original Direct Distance Dialing trial
 
wrote on 10 April 2012 21:25:47 ...
(UK added due to their interest in this subject).


Please stop abusing usenet in this way. This subject is about telephone
systems, NOT railways or transport in London. It is OFF-TOPIC for all
the groups, but if you want to talk about it on m.t.r.a, go ahead. Just
don't pollute other groups because of your mistaken assumption that
we're interested.

FUs set.
--
Richard J.
(to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address)

[email protected] April 10th 12 11:29 PM

1951 original Direct Distance Dialing trial
 
On Apr 10, 5:11*pm, "
wrote:

New York City would have been 212, rather than 11, would it have not?


Yes. But there was a special arrangement from certain NJ towns to
call NYC by dialing an access code, and vice versa.

Obrail: I believe Englewood NJ was served by the New York Central's
West Shore Line, which was losing ridership in the 1950s. The NYC
wanted to terminate psgr service, but the regulators gave them a hard
time. That section of northern NJ is well served by buses that went
direct to the new Port Authority Bus Terminal. I believe an Erie
branch also suffered from low ridership and was abandoned in that era;
now they want to put LRVs on it.



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