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www.worldpayphones.com
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American Payphones | ||||
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| Missing after 9-11 | New York blackout '03 | Bell South | Sandiego | ||
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| 1959 Californian booth stuffing- those crazy kids!! | Woodstock 1999- those crazy kids!! | Detroit | |||
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| Astoria, Queens | old style booth (now all gone) 42nd and Lexington | the famous Mojave desert booth- the world's most remote. You could call it and invariably someone would answer. Now gone, sadly. | |||
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| Hawaii | Millie's Pancake Haus Delavan Wisconsin (thanks to William Slater) | Mobil Gas Station Delavan Wisconsin | Piggly Wiggly Grocery store Delavan Wisconsin | ||
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| Nebraska | Nebraska | bad day... | |||
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| meanwhile in new york... | pee pee in the phonebox- from Karlo in Soho! | ||||
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| Alaskan Ice Art Payphone- sent in by Jasonik | dealerphone | BURNINGMAN playaphone | |||
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gallery- American payphone types |
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| 3 Slot click for more info | Tatung click for more info | QuorTech click for more info | Protel click for more info | ||
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| Millenium click for more info | AT&T 2000 click for more info | Intellicall click for more info | Western Electric Fortress click for more info | ||
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| Western Electric Charge-A-Call click for more info | Northern Telecom Centurion click for more info | Automatic Electric/GTE Fortress click for more info | The lone payphone out there at the base of the Worthington Glacier over near Thompson Pass in Alaska. | ||
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| Verizon COCOT hiding inside a mall. With thanks to the Payphone Project. | Telus Pay Phones Nortel Centurion | Telus Pay Phones GTE Fortress | PhoneTel
COCOT formerly a TDS Telecom |
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| GTE Millennium pay phones | New York 2004 | ||||
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| New York 2004 | New York 2004 | New York 2004 | Now give me money... | ||
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| They may not be foreign payphones but they look rather alien to us. These phones happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time - namely, Los Angeles in the spring of 92. Riots have never been kind to payphones. We can only imagine what the COCOTs looked like. Photos by Kuang. Thanks to 2600.com | Bell System Fortress | At the World's Fair | |||
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| The Whidbey pay phone on the left, and the Verizon pay phone on the right have mutually exclusive local calling areas, so calls between these 2 pay phones are long distance calls. | New Verizon enclosure | New Qwest enclosure | |||
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| Telus Protel Pay Phones | Beach at Lakeview, ID | Airport at Thompson Falls, MT | |||
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| Hancock Center, 94th floor, Chicago | Chinese Restaurant Pay Phone | University of Idaho courtesy phone | |||
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| Hawaii | old wood kiosk c. 1930 | groovy... | Hawaii | ||
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| On the scrapheap in Alaska, as elsewhere.. | North Electric Galion Single Slot Payphone | ||||
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| history
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| click here to see a full selection of 3 slot payphones | |||||
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| coin collector | interesting coin collector | ||||
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| Gray Silver Dollar Paystation CoinChute | |||||
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The first payphones had an attendant who collected the money and placed the calls. The phones were often in very fancy large booths. William Gray, who is considered the "inventor" of the payphone, started the Gray Telephone Pay Station Co. in 1891. A patent allowed him to sell his "unattended" payphones to all of the phone companies in the country. He started selling the familiar "3 Slot" payphone in 1913, which remained basically the same (many interchangeable parts) until 1965 (see ad below). The same payphone parts were used by many different manufacturers, who added their own handsets, transmitters, dials etc. Gray was sold to Automatic Electric in 1948. |
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HIGHLIGHTS IN PAY PHONE HISTORYPay telephone stations preceded the invention of the pay phone and existed as early as 1878. These stations were supervised by telephone company attendants or agents (such as an employee in a hotel where a station might be located) who collected the money due after people made their calls. Some pay stations utilized a fail-safe collection method: After making the connections for customers, attendants would lock them in booths so they couldn't leave without paying.In 1889, the first public coin telephone was installed by inventor William Gray at a bank in Hartford, Conn. It was a "postpay" machine (coins were deposited after the call was placed). Gray's previous claim to fame was inventing the inflatable chest protector for baseball. In 1898, the Western Electric No. 5 Coin Collector, the first automatic "prepay" station, went into use in Chicago. The depositing of coins before placing a call would gradually become the norm in pay phones until the introduction of "dial tone first" service in 1966. o By 1902, there were 81,000 pay telephones in the United States. In 1905, the first outdoor Bell System coin telephone was installed on a Cincinnati street. It wasn't an instant hit; people apparently were reluctant to make private calls on a public thoroughfare. (Moose were not as shy when they first encountered outdoor pay phones. When Bell Laboratories designed a new glass and aluminum outdoor telephone booth in the 1950s, it was a great advancement over the wooden outdoor booths that had been in use for a number of years. And yet several booths ordered by the U.S. National Park Service were found mysteriously broken and battered. Park rangers soon knew the answer, though: It was mating season for moose. Amorous--but territorial--bulls were charging the booths whenever they saw their reflections in the glass.) In 1910, Western Electric and Gray Telephone Pay Station Co. signed an agreement for Gray to manufacture coin collectors for the Bell System using both Gray and Western Electric patents. o The result of that agreement, the 50A coin collector, went into production in 1911. By the end of 1912, 25,000 of these coin telephones had been ordered for New York City alone. The 50A model had three coin slots--for nickels, dimes and quarters --and was a "prepay" machine. The basic design, though often modified, was so practical and reliable it remained in production until 1964. In 1965, Western Electric introduced the 50A's successor. Among other things, it had a single coin slot instead of three, and electronic signalling of coins deposited replaced mechanical bells. The booths that house pay phones have undergone more design changes than the phones themselves. At the turn of the century, indoor booths were constructed of durable hardwood, such as mahogany, with comfort and privacy in mind, and exhibited detailed craftsmanship. They were often carpeted. The "original" telephone booth is credited to Thomas Watson, the man who helped Alexander Graham Bell invent the telephone. Watson's "booth" was made by draping blankets over the furniture in his room and crawling underneath to conduct early telephone experiments. One story says Watson, in order to hear, was insulating himself from street noises. Another story is that his landlady ordered Watson to be quieter; his shouting, albeit for the sake of science, was disturbing other boarders. In 1883 Watson designed a real booth. It was built of expensive wood, had a domed top with a ventilator, windows with screens, and a desk with pen and ink. Over the years, telephone booths have reflected their surroundings as well as the times. There have been phone booths resembling cable cars in San Francisco, and others resembling pagodas in New York City's Chinatown district. In the 1960s, as American architects designed glass-wall office buildings, wooden phone booths looked out of place in lobbies. Bell Laboratories designed an indoor glass and metal phone booth to better fit newer surroundings. Not all of the designs for phone booths have reached the market. An experimental "hands-free" booth in 1972 featured a microphone in front of the caller and a loudspeaker in the booth's ceiling. Observers noted that people readily tried the new arrangement but that, conditioned to speaking in the direction another voice is coming from, they were all shouting into the ceiling. In 1950, the first coin telephone mobile train service was established on the Pennsylvania Railroad between New York and Washington. "Calling from your car" was first tested in Mobile Ala., and Chicago in 1957. Drive-up pay telephones proved popular and are still in use today. o In 1960, the Bell System installed its one millionth pay telephone. In 1964, when the U.S. Treasury Department decided to change the metallic composition of U.S. coins, it consulted with Bell Laboratories to ensure the new coins would still function properly in pay phones. "Dial tone first" service was introduced in 1966 in Hartford, Conn. This essentially turned coin phones into emergency call stations because such calls could be made without first depositing coins. In 1977, "automatic coin telephone service" was introduced in Phoenix, Ariz. This allowed most pay telephone calls, including long-distance, to be made without operator assistance. A computer-controlled synthesized voice gave customers the necessary instructions. AT&T introduced "Charge-a-Call," a "coinless" pay phone, in 1978 (and the term "pay phone" began to replace "coin phone"). In 1984, AT&T introduced the AT&T Card Caller, which featured a video screen with dialing instructions and allowed customers to charge calls by inserting an AT&T Calling Card. The Card Caller also was the first of AT&T's public phones to feature |
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| ref- | http://www.att.com/news/1091/911002.csa.html
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| Timeline | |||||
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1889 The first public coin telephone was installed by inventor William Gray at a bank in Hartford, Conn. It was a "postpay" machine (coins were deposited after the call was placed). Gray's previous claim to fame was inventing the inflatable chest protector for baseball. 1898
The
Western Electric No. 5 Coin Collector, the first automatic
"prepay" station, went into use in Chicago. The depositing
of coins before placing a call would gradually become the norm in
pay phones. 1902 There
were 81,000 pay telephones in the United States. 1905 The
first outdoor Bell System coin telephone was installed on a
Cincinnati street. It wasn't an instant hit; people apparently were
reluctant to make private calls on a public thoroughfare. 1950s
Glass
outdoor telephone booths began replacing wooden ones. 1957 "Calling
from your car" was first tested in Mobile, Ala., and Chicago.
Drive-up pay telephones proved popular and are still in use today. 1960 The
Bell System installed its millionth pay telephone. 1964 When
the Treasury Department decided to change the metallic composition
of U.S. coins, it consulted with Bell Laboratories to ensure the new
coins would still function properly in pay phones. 1977 Automatic
coin telephone service was introduced in Phoenix. This allowed most
pay telephone calls, including long-distance, to be made without
operator assistance. A computer-controlled synthesized voice gave
customers the necessary instructions. 2001 BellSouth
announced that it was getting out of the pay phone business. It was
the first major phone company to do so. 2003 MARCH:
The United States had 1.5 million pay phones, down from 2.1 million
in 1999. MAY:
Verizon began installing wireless transmission gear in some of its
public phone booths, creating Wi-Fi hot spots where paying customers
can use the Web. MARCH
2004 BellSouth
finished disconnecting or selling its 144,000 pay phones. SOURCES:
AMERICAN PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS COUNCIL, PHONE COMPANIES |
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