Jones Photo Historical Collection
Portfolios

Hoquiam offices, Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. ? — circa 1929 — #11199_1

< Prev  |  Image #11199_1  |  Next >
Showing 108 of 700

Send To Friend

Photograph Copyright Anderson & Middleton Company

Places

United States — Washington (State) — Hoquiam

Studio Client

Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co.

Description

The telephone company office at the corner of 6th and K. This structure was built circa 1922 and in the 1950s, there were still operators working there who would handle calls directly.  Customers would pick up the phone, wait for the operator to say "number please" and then would tell them the number or name of person to be called.  When the office was merged in to the central phone office in Aberdeen  in about 1958 after dial phones were installed, this office was closed.  It was eventually sold to the Church of the Nazarene and later to Timberland Bank.  It suffered  damage in an earthquake and was vacant for years before its demolition on January 21, 2008..  A sign in the photograph reads, "Hospital. Quiet." Thanks to Jack Durney and John Larson for contributing information.
Additional thanks to Sam Talley, who writes: "You had to talk to an operator when placing a call, giving her your desired number, and she would call it. Operators were always women, never men. Our number was 'ABerdeen 2182-R'. The R connotated a party line which meant three and four households were on the same line; and if you were nosey, you could listen in on other's conversations. Each party had its own ring. Ours was two short rings which would sound about every 3 seconds until you answered the phone. There were also single long rings, two long rings, and single short rings. If a student's mother was an operator, she could come on the line from the telephone office and suggest you had been talking long enough and to hang up. I had a younger girl on our party line and she would snoop in on my conversations for some of my girlfriends. Most households had one phone that had to be shared with all household members. Private conversations were at a minimum. Kids would talk while under a blanket on the couch, talk while in a closet, etc.”

Submit Feedback




Advanced Search Advanced Search