Tag: telephone concerts

Philadelphia on the String: How We Took Up the Telephone

Philadelphia on the String: How We Took Up the Telephone

Philadelphia Inquirer, 11 April 1877; Leisure Hours, November 1888

It was here, during the Centennial, that the telephone was introduced to the public. A sensation, no doubt, but what could one do with it? The Wasp, a satirical magazine from San Francisco, suggested in April 1877 that telephones would permit commanders to direct battles remotely, with feet up and uniforms clean and tidy, and allow transmission of live musical performances. In fact, that month saw a number of “telephone concerts” using a combination of telegraph and telephone technology. All the concerts had Philadelphia at one end or the other.


For the first time, people could experience, in real time, a distant event. Space had been “annihilated,” as the Bell company would later say. Still, the concerts seemed to dwindle into a novelty. As a novelty, the telephone was slow to realize its practical as well as its profound possibilities. An invention that could alter daily life in a hundred ways was used for entertainment, as electricity had been used for parlor games, or for electrocuting the occasional turkey.


Telephones would become part of daily life, but slowly and starting at the top. A new surgical procedure or improved stove benefits individuals immediately, one by one, but a single telephone is useless. Add another one, and you have begun to add value that increases with each new user as networks develop. The late 1870s saw not only the concerts, but also the leasing and installation of phones connecting buildings two by two in initially self-contained links, like speaking tubes or tin-can “telephones”: a business and the owner’s residence; a courthouse and a law office; two buildings in a factory complex. The phone was no longer a novelty. It became a convenience for professional people. But at this early stage, most people had no one to call.


The advertisement on the right shows that by 1888, a dozen years after the Centennial, talking with a machine was so common that it might shame forward-thinking people into writing with a machine (though they apparently can’t phone for further information).

For a snappier endorsement, we can sneak up to Boston for the 1885 lyrics of H. W. Durand’s “The Telephone.” It is full of slang–for example, “on the string.” Also, unlike the countless songs about love on the wire, it takes a broad view of telephone use. Church services could now be enjoyed by the homebound–very worthy. And–not so worthy–they could “skip the deacon with the contribution box.”


But back to the story. In the early 1880s, some businesses began to advertise their telephone connections to the public. Clearly, the networks were expanding.

advertisement, coal, Philadelphia, telephone
Official Programme of the Bi-Centennial Celebration of the Founding of Pennsylvania by Wm. Penn, 1882
advertisement, Philadelphia, Philadelphia Metal Cornice Works, architecture, skylights, ventilators, ceiling, roofing
Boyd’s Co-Partnership and Residence Business Directory of Philadelphia City, 1900

Many continued with older means of communication, with or without the telephone: calling (that is, in-person visits; see advertisements from Gara, McGinley & Co. and T. J. McCartney), “postals,” mail order catalogues, and the telegraph. The more ways to reach the customer, the better. Eventually the teletype joined the list.

Advertisement, McCalla & Stavely, printers and publishers, Philadelphia, telephone, post office box
Official Programme of the Bi-Centennial Celebration of the Founding of Pennsylvania by Wm. Penn, 1882
Advertisement, Geo. W. Pride & Son, steam towing, Philadelphia, telegram, telephone
The Commercial Manual of Philadelphia, 1886
Philadelphia, commerce, shipping, 101 Walnut, cable, Lloyds
The Commercial Manual of Philadelphia, 1886
Philadelphia, stationery, novelties, 1888, paper fasteners
American Stationer 21, 1887
Wm. B. Burk & Co., importing, sponges, chamois, Arch and N 6th, cable 1893
The City of Philadelphia as It Appears in the Year 1893
advertisement, Philadelphia, Philadelphia Engineering Works, 1893, cable, rules, formulae, blast furnaces, equipment, steel plants, iron works,
Catalogue of the Manufactures of Philadelphia Engineering Works, Limited, 1893
advertisement, Philadelphia, 1893, Rutter, funeral directory, telegraph, West Philadelphia
Philadelphia Blue Book, 1893
advertisement, Philadelphia, William Penn Laundry, 1509 Stillman, postal, pick-up, 1896, Oak Lane Presbyterian
The Cook and the Cupboard, Oak Lane Presbyterian Church, 1896
advertisement, Philadelphia, 1897, architectural sheet metal, roof, cornice, skylight, ceiling, building front, 23 S 17th, telephone
Philadelphia Blue Book, 1897
advertisement, Philadelphia, McGlenn, funeral monuments, marble, granite, Kensington, 1900
Boyd’s Co-Partnership and Residence Business Directory of Philadelphia City, 1900
advertisement, Philadelphia, detective, 1220 Filbert, 1903, Bell and Keystone, commercial and criminal
Boyd’s Elite List, 1903
advertisement, Philadelphia, L. C. Gad, awning, wagon cover, tent maker, repairing, 1601 N. 12th, phone, mail order, linen to hire
Boyd’s Elite List, 1903
advertisement, clock repair, Philadelphia, Carl Hieke, 2813 Jefferson, postal, 1903
Boyd’s Elite List, 1903
advertisement, Philadelphia, 5344 Germantown Avenue, Germantown, laundry, pick-up, telephone, postal, Main Street, 1903
Boyd’s Elite List, 1903: “The telephone makes us neighbors.”
advertisement, Philadelphia, 1917, T. J. McCartney, roofing, tin, gravel slag, slate, phone, postal
Boyd’s Business Directory, 1917
advertisement, Philadelphia, Ryerson Steels, Joseph T. Ryerson & Son, 5200 Grays Avenue, telephone, teletype
Ryerson Steels, Catalogue and Price Guide, 1941-42; teletype connection


New technology, new vocabulary. One writer apologized in 1877 (Kate Field, ed., The History of Bell’s Telephone [1878], p. 25) for using “telephone” as a verb (not to worry–Shakespeare was fond of verbing; also note “postal us” in the Manheim Laundry ad above), but soon “telephone” and “telephonic connections” (see McCalla & Stavely 1882 above) were joined by “‘phone.” The equipment used gave rise to expressions like “get on the horn,” “ring us up” (Manheim Laundry again), and “wire” (as in telegraphy; see the Heinemann advertisement below, which could refer to the telephone: “Wire for us and we’ll Wire for you”) or “wires,” on which the Nurses’ League operators were available night and day.

advertisement, Philadelphia, Bradley's New Great Western Meat Market, Market and 21st NW, 1887, Chicago beef, public institution discount, hotels, restaurants, ships
Official Programme of the Constitutional Centennial Celebration, 1887. “Call”–that would be in person.
advertisement, Philadelphia, Lombard Investment Company, 21 23 South 6th, 1887, explanatory pamphlets
Philadelphia and Its Environs, 1887. Ditto, probably.

advertisement, Philadelphia, Thos. H. McCollin & Co., 1030 Arch, 1896, cameras, film processing and finishing, Kodaks Bulls Eyes, Cycle Pocos, cyclists, wheelmen, tourists, 'phone
The Reporter’s Nosegay, 1896
advertisement, Philadelphia, Rouillot & Co., grain stock brokers, 1204 Chestnut, formerly 125 South 3rd, 1898, elevator, ladies' accommodationentrance, pamphlet, mail order, 'phone, wires
Philadelphia Inquirer Almanac, 1898
advertisement, Philadelphia, National Housecleaning and Disinfecting Co., 908 Walnut, whitewash, ashes removed, vermin removed, guarantee, estimates, 'phone, 1903, N. M. Veale
Boyd’s Elite List, 1903
advertisement, Philadelphia, Geo. Heinemann & Co., 500 Girard, electrical engineers and contractors, electrical supplies, dynamo and motor repair, Convention Hall, phones
Official Pictorial and Descriptive Souvenir Book of the Historical Pageant . . . , 1912
advertisement, Edward Trust's Professional Directory, Philadelphia, nurse directory, Nurses' League Corporation, 134 N. 18th, grades and rates, operators night and day, phones
Edward Trust’s Professional Directory of . . . Philadelphia . . . , 1918-19

New technology, new accessories. Telephone nooks or niches became standard wall features in the days of stick phones. The nooks might have looked like shrines, but sometimes the instruments were hidden under, or behind, dolls (note the apparently disemboweled “telephone girl” below), or behind flower-garlanded crepe paper stands (top row) unlikely to turn up in an image search for “phone screen.”

advertisement, Dennison Mfg., party book, 1917, Easter gifts, telephone screen, telephone girl, crafts, crepe paper, screen, box, waste basket, frame, phone girl
Dennison Manufacturing Co., 1917 Party Book. The company was based in Massachusetts, but had stores in Philadelphia.

Another form of telephone screen:

advertisement, Philadelphia, Hygienic Phone Disc Co., 100 N. 3rd, 1906, advertising novelty, telephone, antiseptic shield,
American Business: A Review for Executives, 1906

Meanwhile, telephone use became increasingly sophisticated: round the clock service (as noted); shopping by phone; long distance; public phones, often found in telephone offices, where the staff could assist and accept payment; and pay stations (pay phones) that were sometimes free. Pay phones started to move outdoors during the early 1900s. Special telephone numbers for animal ambulance service were offered (see below, from 1900 and 1907).

advertisement, Philadelphia, Colonnade Hotel, Chestnut and 15th, restaurant, cafe, telegraph, long-distance telephone, public stenographer, H. J. and G. R., Crump
The Mask and Wig Club, “King Arthur,” 1894
advertisement, Philadelphia, Upperman Bros., 1205 Filbert, 1898, fish, lobster, green turtles, snapper, hard and soft shell crabs, long-distance telephone
The Cook and the Cupboard, Oak Lane Presbyterian Church, 1896
advertisement, Philadelphia, Bell Telephone, Market above 4th, public telephone facilities, 1896
The Reporter’s Nosegay, 1896
advertisement, Philadelphia, F. A. Black & Son, 620 S. Washington Square, Stogdale Building, Philadelphia, house painting, decorating, paper hanging, ivory white gold finishing, hardwood polishing, estimates for repairs, long-distance telephone, Francis A. Black
Catalogue of the T Square Club Exhibition, and Architectural Annual for the Year 1898
advertisement, Philadelphia, Jacob Myers & Sons, carpenters and builders, Juniper and Sansom NE, 1898, long distance telephone, J. Walter Myers, William H. Meyers, Bell telephone symbol
Catalogue of the T Square Club Exhibition, and Architectural Annual for the Year 1898
advertisement, Philadelphia, J. J. Maher Veterinary Hospital, 1336 1340 Marshall Street, horses, dogs, small animals, ambulance service
Boyd’s Co-Partnership and Residence Business Directory of Philadelphia City, 1900
advertisement, Philadelphia, Philadelphia Engineering Works, Mifflin E of S. Front, 1905, Philadelphia Corliss Engine, air-pumps, condensers, heaters, compressor, boilers, chimneys, tanks, stand pipes, steel buildings, catalogues, long-distance telephone
Catalogue of the Manufactures of Philadelphia Engineering Works, Limited, 1905
advertisement, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 1627 Chestnut, 1907, officers, donations, telephone numbers, ambulance telephones, Keystone and Bell
Philadelphia Blue Book, 1907
advertisement, Philadelphia, Pullman Taxicab Co., "Green Taxis," Wood and N. 16th,
Official Pictorial and Descriptive Souvenir Book of the Historical Pageant . . . , 1912
advertisement, Philadelphia, Baessler's Drug Store, Market and 53rd, Melba Face Powder, day and night phones
The Torch, West Philadelphia High School for Girls, June 1917
advertisement, Philadelphia, Stiteler's Meat Market, 6148 Lansdowne Ave, 1917, telephone orders
The Torch, West Philadelphia High School for Girls, June 1917
advertisement, Philadelphia, Quaker City Cab Company, 1921, taxicabs, Keystone Pay Stations no charge, Hotels, Pennsylvania RR Stations, ferries
American Federationist 21, January 1921

A new phrase, and complication, arose around the turn of the century: “both phones.” Rivals to the Bell system turn up in directories at the end of the nineteenth century. Then a serious contender appeared: the Keystone Company. Keystone was marketed as a local firm, a smaller system with faster service, and a friend of commerce: “When the Keystone rings, It’s BUSINESS.”

telephone directory, Philadelphia, Spring 1939, Keystone Telephone, special numbers: weather, time, police, information, long distance, complaint, "When the Keystone rings, It's BUSINESS"
Cover detail, Keystone Telephone Directory, Spring 1939, with dial and exchanges

Advertising had to make room for “both phones.” An earlier post (“Marks, Manicules, and Markland: Street Signage in Nineteenth-Century Philadelphia”)

https://philadelphiaasadvertised.com/2021/04/14/marks-manicules-and-markland-street-signage-in-nineteenth-century-philadelphia/

showed how much advertising space was devoted, before street numbering reform, to telling customers how to find businesses that did not have the good fortune to be on street corners. The physical addresses got sorted out, and then came “virtual” addresses: cable and telephone. In addition to a simple “both phones,” the ads might say “Bell and Keystone”; or give single, or multiple, numbers from one provider, or from both; or list a number or two with no mention of providers (customers could identify exchanges as belonging to Bell or to Keystone; in the Woodington ad, Locust is Bell and Race is Keystone). Note (Quaker City Stencil & Stamp Works) that the Keystone directory would list Bell numbers.

advertisement, Philadelphia, Ellwood Heacock, undertaker, 2027 N. College, both telephones, Society of Friends
Friends’ Intelligencer 67, 1910
advertising, Philadelphia, McMullin-Weber, Inc., 157 159 N. 3rd Street, Philadelphia, chrome zinc, nickel zinc, etc., undated, gauge and table weight chart, Bell and Keystone telephone numbers
McMullin-Weber, Inc., 157-59 N. Third Street, undated advertising notice. Call=telephone!
Eighteenth Annual Report of the National Farm School, 1915
advertisement, Philadelphia, Shoemaker & Smith, Delaware Odorless Excavating Co., Callowhill and N. 4th NE, 3626 Frankford, 1226 W. Lehigh, 1917, Bell and Keystone phones, mail orders
Boyd’s Business Directory, 1917
advertisement, Philadelphia, Woodington Mail Advertising Service, Colonial Trust Building, Market and 13th, personalized letters and envelopes, delivery, 1926, telephones
The Philadelphia Forum Magazine, October 1926
Thirtieth Annual Report of the National Farm School, 1927
advertisement, Philadelphia, Clarence L. Meyers, Inc., Somerset and N. 2nd, yarns, Bell and Keystone telephones
Thirtieth Annual Report of the National Farm School, 1927
advertisement, Philadelphia, Quaker City Stencil and Stamp Works, 234 Arch St., rubber stamps, brass and steel dies, metal checks and badges, 1939, Bell and Keystone phones
Keystone Telephone Directory, Spring 1939

The advertisement below seems strange for the late 1920s, when direct dialing was coming into use. With an operator, the customer can provide a number or a name. Without an operator, the customer must have the number. “Telephone connection” offers little help.

Thirtieth Annual Report of the National Farm School, 1927

Bell did not, of course, agree that Keystone owned the business community; a full-page 1908 advertisement asserted that “Philadelphia is practically all Belltelephoned” (verbing is not always a good idea), and that Bell was the “beaten path” for business.

detail of advertisement, Philadelphia, Bell Telephone, 1908, "What the Bell Telephone Company has done for Philadelphia," "USE THE BELL"
Official Historical Souvenir: Philadelphia, Its Founding and Development, 1683-1908, 1908, detail of full-page advertisement

Here we find a claim that Bell had “annihilated space and time,” so that “every city and town of importance within a thousand miles” could be reached “at a moment’s notice.” Competitors are not mentioned. Despite the bravado, it’s odd that Bell gave the feeble command “Use the Bell,” while its rival got away with “when the Keystone rings.”


Bell had not yet vanquished Keystone, but “both phones,” which lasted longer in Philadelphia than in any other major city, did seem to duplicate, not enhance, services. For example, a newspaper soliciting want ads had to have operators for Bell and for Keystone customers. In the advertisement below, note the plural form in the phrase “private branch exchanges.” As I understand the term, the exchanges created a private system within a business, independent of the public system, for the sake of efficiency and economy. It could not have seemed efficient to set up and operate two of those exchanges.

advertisement, Philadelphia, Milden & White, 1207 1212 Filbert, poultry, game, terrapin, fish, sea foods, 1917, established 1874, Bell and Keystone private branch exchanges, W. H. White, R. W. Crouse
Program, Lu Lu Temple Stock Company, “The Amulet” and “Scheherazade,” at the Metropolitan Opera House, April and May 1919

At last Keystone was absorbed, and ended service in September 1945. “Both phones” has a monument: on the southeast corner of Filbert and Preston is a former Keystone building (note the keystone windows), now Philadanco headquarters. Across Preston Street, as though recalling the Manheim Laundry’s claim that “the telephone makes us neighbors,” is a former Bell Telephone building.

photograph, Philadelphia, Filbert and Preston looking south 2023, former Keystone Telephone building on SE corner, now Philadanco; former Bell Telephone building to SW
Filbert and Preston Streets, looking south toward Market Street, 2023: former Keystone Telephone building, now Philadanco, on the SE corner; former Bell Telephone building below the SW corner. It’s the one with the fire escape and–a bit awkward for my concluding flourish–keystone windows.