Telephone Service - Number By Number Gloria McNeely

As we head down the "Information Highway" in the closing decade of this century we look back in awe at the changes in the field of communication that have occurred since Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1875: commercial radio stations, "talking" pictures, television, computers, "web" pages……

Bell’s assistant first heard his voice through the phone just a few years after the first homesteaders came to the Snoqualmie Valley. Back then, getting a message as far as Seattle meant a couple of days’ ride on horseback - now almost every home has a telephone connecting us with the world. So how did this magic instrument find its way here?

In 1990, just a few years before his death, Jim Satterlee talked about this. Many reading this will count themselves among Jim’s numerous friends and remember him as a respected Valley native, athlete, teacher at Snoqualmie Middle School, and leader in the community. He recalled that his grandparents, Newton R. and Julia Camp Harshman, were instrumental in developing telephone service for the Fall City area. They purchased a "phone company" with "six or eight people on the system" from Emerson Neighbors at about the turn of the century. They established a switchboard in their Fall City home, now a King County Landmark, and steadily built business and service until Newton Harshman’s tragic death from multiple bee stings in 1931. At that time Jim’s parents, George E. and Gertrude H. Satterlee, stepped in to keep the telephone company operating. The family continued to operate local service until 1947, when the company was sold to the Cascade Telephone Company, founded by George Gaines. Cascade was eventually acquired by Telephone Utilities of Washington, now PTI Communications.

According to the Encyclopedia Britannica (Vol. II c. 1974-86) there were more than 150,000 telephones in the United States only eleven years after its invention. At the same time there were 26,000 in the United Kingdom, 9,000 in France and 7,000 in Russia. By 1979 there were more than 153 million telephones in our country alone.

The evolution and proliferation of the telephone worldwide is echoed here in our Snoqualmie Valley, and can be illustrated by the telephonic history of one household - mine, which now contains three of them.

In 1941 my husband Denton and I moved our family into the house that is still home. We had the only telephone on the block then, and when you wanted to make a call you lifted the receiver to hear the operator say "number, please!" (No, you didn’t have to crank it!) Our phone number was 558.

Half a dozen years later, World War II was over and service had expanded locally to the point that the company expanded to a four digit format (1947 was the introductory year for dial phones in the Valley - see instructions in this newsletter Ed.). Not much later, big city ID came to our Snoqualmie Valley. We needed a prefix. "Our 2224" became 88-2224 in 1952, then TU8-4924 in 1958. A few years later, the company again assigned new numbers and switched to a numeric prefix (888) to conform to what was happening across the country.

The latest inevitable change, given the Valley’s growing population, is the addition of a second prefix, 831, in the upper Valley, along with Fall City’s traditional 222. It is a long way from the earliest telephone service here.

One more thing about our telephone. During the war years many neighbors used our phone for casual or important calls since it was the only one nearby. There is THE call I will never forget. It came for Helen Carlson ( a longtime resident of the Valley now living in Auburn). I ran to get her when the call she had been waiting for finally came. It was to tell her that her brother Jerry Emerick was safe and coming home. He had been on the Bataan Death March in the Philippines in 1942 and had been a prisoner of war for four years.

Instructions For Using Dial Telephone

Familiar as we are now with touch tone phones, answering machines, cellular phones and other electronic wizardry, remember that less than 50 years ago dial phones were a new feature in the Snoqualmie Valley. After reading Gloria McNeely’s article on the evolution of local telephone service, peruse the instructions below for use of the "new" phones, copied from the Cascade Telephone Company Directory for 1947.

OBTAIN CORRECT TELEPHONE NUMBERS

Obtain the correct telephone number from the correct issue of the directory. If the number is not found in the directory dial "O" for the operator, who will give you the correct number.

LISTEN FOR DIAL TONE

After removing the receiver you will hear a "humming" sound known as the dial tone, which indicates the equipment is ready to receive your call. Do not start to dial unless you have heard the dial tone.

DIALING

Dial each figure of the number as shown in the directory. Speeding up or holding back the dial on its return will cause the equipment to function improperly, which may cause a wrong number. If your finger slips in the dial or if you discover that you have made a mistake, hang up the receiver for a few seconds. Remove it, listen for the dial tone and start your call again.

If you repeatedly encounter the busy signal or have reason to believe the line is not busy, or if you have difficulty in dialing another party on your own line, dial "O" and explain the situation to the operator and she will assist you.

THE RINGING SIGNAL

The ringing signal is an intermittent "burring" sound which informs you that the bell of the called number is ringing.

THE BUSY SIGNAL

The busy signal is a rapid "buzz-buzz-buzz" sound and informs you that the called line is busy. When you hear this signal after dialing a number, hang up the receiver and call again after a reasonable time.

TO CALL ANOTHER PARTY ON YOUR LINE

You may identify another subscriber as being on your line if the two middle digits of his number are the same as the two middle digits of your number. To call a party on your line, call the listed directory number. Such calls must be made as follows:

  1. Remove receiver from hook and listen for dial tone.
  2. After dial tone is heard, dial the listed number. A busy tone will be heard. Leave the receiver to your ear and hold receiver hook down. A slight burring sound will be heard, informing you the called telephone is ringing. When the burring quits, the called party has answered. Let up receiver hook and talk to your party.