photograph of a full page newspaper story. the top half of the page features a black and white photograph of a woman smiling with a telephone handset up to her mouth. she is standing on the left of a large replica of a telephone dial possibly with a switchboard. a man in a suit stands on the right. text for the article is below.
In 1954, Mountain Bell employees taught Boulder residents how to dial a telephone.
1954 Dial Day' in Boulder
In the early months
the finger stop, the dial pany employee, was unique to
Area codes, at the time, were
of 1954, Mountain Bell
must be allowed to re-
party-line subscribers. Most only used by operators who
Telephone employ-
turn freely to its start-
party lines were spread across
ees visited clubs and
ing position."
were contacted by dialing
four households. Residents
the number "0") for long-dis-
schools in Boulder to
Boulder, in 1954, had could (and often did) listen in tance calls, even from Boulder
teach members of the
a population of approxi-
to conversations of the other
to Denver. The operators also
mately 25,000 residents.
subscribers -- often, annoyed gave directory information and
a telephone. Before
"Dial Day," residents wanting to make a call only had to pick up their receivers and wait for an operator to ask, "Number please?" Finally, on March 6, 1954, phone users could make local calls themselves, but they had a lot to learn.
"Midnight tonight will be a historic moment for Boulder,". stated a writer in the Camera's
24-page special "Dial Day" sup-plement. Subscribers had to be told to wait for the dial tone ("a steady hum") before placing their calls. Then, they were taught how to physically dial their new rotary phones.
"Don't force the dial to try to speed it up," stated a Mountain Bell employee. "After each number is pulled around to
According to the Cam-
when the shared phone was in
assisted in emergency calls.
era, there were 40 tele-
use. In return, they got reduced
Individuals took a while
phones for every 100
ra…
in 1954 telephone employees at Mountain Bell came to Boulder, Colorado for "Dial Day" to teach residents how to dial a telephone. reportedly, employees explained "how busy signals were different than siren-like tones that indicated that a caller had mis-dialed." #othernetworks