Telephones

Candlestick Telephones 1906 - 1929
100/200 Series 1929-1959
300 Series 1937-1959
700 Series 1959 - 1983
Trimphones 1966 – 1983
Wall Telephones
Non Post Office Telephones
USA Telephones
European Telephones

Ancillary Items

Spare parts
Cords
Mod leads
Dials
Bell Sets
Dial Labels
International Cord Connectors/Converters

 

The dawn of Telephony

By the 1830’s, the properties of electricity were being realised.  The first Telegraph had been invented and Morse Code would enable instant communication over long distances. Voice transmission was out of reach until the the 1870’s when several experiments proved moderately successful.  

Guy MaunsellAlexander Graham Bell patented his telephone on the 14th of February 1876. The system consisted of  a microphone and a speaker. The microphone was like a funnel, the wide  end open and the narrow end pointing into a membrane connected to a rotor that  followed the vibrations of the membrane. This vibrating rotor was connected to a coil to induce a voltage with the same frequency of the voice sent into the funnel. Bell's microphone changed sound waves into a pulsating voltage which is faster and easier to transmit than sound waves. The speaker was made in similar fashion  to the microphone.

Initially, nobody was interested in Bell’s invention . When he asked the Western Telegraph Company to buy his patent for $100,000, the response was "What shall we do with a toy like that?" this occurred in 1877. A few years later the same company offered him $25,000,000 for his patent but this time he was the one to refuse the offer. In contrast to other inventors Bell believed in the commercial use of his telephone system. He published his invention just after he had patented it. At the world exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876 he demonstrated his telephone and caused a sensation. On the 6th of October 1877 the Scientific American published Bell's idea in a way it had not been realised so far.  The invention itself was a long way from being put into practice but Bell's communications system finally reached the public's attention,  despite many others having done similar experiments. There were about 30 other telephone systems patented within the following years.
One year after the invention, five banks  in Boston ordered  Bell's telephone systems. These systems revealed several shortcomings. His telephone was better receiving than transmitting. The microphone was not sensitive enough. This was improved by David Edward Hughes' (1831-1900) invention of the carbon microphone (1878) which was more sensitive.
In 1880 in the USA the telephone net had already 50 000 subscribers.

In all higher industrialised countries the telephone soon became very popular. The speed of this development slowed down only during wars or economic crisis. In the following years telephony became more and more sophisticated. When you wanted to give somebody else a call he or she had to talk to an operator first who made the connection manually on a connecting board. This took a long time as each individual telephone subscriber had to have his own socket which was connected and disconnected by hand. The manual exchange was the only way of making telephone calls until in 1889 Almon B. Strowger invented a system that allowed each individual telephone subscriber to establish their own telephone connections.  Strowger was a funeral director who’s competition was quickly alerted upon news of deaths,  their wives and daughters worked as telephone operators!. Strowger  vowed to eliminate the human element and set himself the task of building a simple automatic switch.  Utilising collar bones from his shirts, a makeshift auto-switch was produced.  After enlisting the financial and technical help of his nephew, he managed to engage the interest of the American telephone companies.
 
This development made people more independent because they could dial themselves to establish their telephone connections. In 1892 A. B. Strowger founded his "Strowger Automatic Telephone Exchange Company" which was the worlds first telephone exchange without operators.