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Telephone switchboard

A telephone switchboard was a device used to connect circuits of telephones to establish telephone calls between users or other switchboards, throughout the 20th century. The switchboard was an essential component of a manual telephone exchange, and was operated by switchboard operators who used electrical cords or switches to establish the connections.

PBX switchboard, 1975

The electromechanical automatic telephone exchange, invented by Almon Strowger in 1888, gradually replaced manual switchboards in central telephone exchanges around the world. In 1919, the Bell System in Canada also adopted automatic switching as its future technology, after years of reliance on manual systems.

Nevertheless, many manual branch exchanges remained operational into the second half of the 20th century in many enterprises. Later electronic devices and computer technology gave the operator access to an abundance of features. A private branch exchange (PBX) in a business usually has an attendant console, or an auto-attendant function, which bypasses the operator.

History edit

 
Telephone operator, c. 1900

Following the invention of the telephone in 1876, the first telephones were rented in pairs which were limited to conversation between the parties operating those two instruments. The use of a central exchange was soon found to be even more advantageous than in telegraphy.

In May 1877, The Holmes Burglar Alarm Company in Boston, Massachusetts, established by Edwin T. Holmes installed the first central office and switchboard that served both as a security service at night for banks and businesses, as well as a telephone system.[1] The switchboard operated telephone instruments manufactured by Charles Williams, a licensee of the Alexander Graham Bell company.

In January 1878 the Boston Telephone Dispatch company had started hiring boys as telephone operators. Boys had been very successful as telegraphy operators, but their attitude, lack of patience, and behavior was unacceptable for live telephone contact,[2] so the company began hiring women operators instead. Thus, on September 1, 1878, Boston Telephone Dispatch hired Emma Nutt as the first woman operator. Small towns typically had the switchboard installed in the operator's home so that he or she could answer calls on a 24-hour basis. In 1894, New England Telephone and Telegraph Company installed the first battery-operated switchboard on January 9 in Lexington, Massachusetts.

Early switchboards in large cities usually were mounted floor to ceiling in order to allow the operators to reach all the lines in the exchange. The operators were boys who would use a ladder to connect to the higher jacks. Late in the 1890s this measure failed to keep up with the increasing number of lines, and Milo G. Kellogg devised the Divided Multiple Switchboard for operators to work together, with a team on the "A board" and another on the "B". These operators were almost always women until the early 1970s, when men were once again hired.[3] Cord switchboards were often referred to as "cordboards" by telephone company personnel. Conversion to Panel switch and other automated switching systems first eliminated the "B" operator and then, usually years later, the "A". Rural and suburban switchboards for the most part remained small and simple. In many cases, customers knew their operator by name.

As telephone exchanges converted to automatic (dial) service, switchboards continued to serve specialized purposes. Before the advent of direct-dialed long-distance calls, a subscriber would need to contact the long-distance operator in order to place a toll call. In large cities, there was often a special number, such as 112, which would ring the long-distance operator directly. Elsewhere, the subscriber would ask the local operator to ring the long-distance operator.

The long-distance operator would record the name and city of the person to be called, and the operator would advise the calling party to hang up and wait for the call to be completed. Each toll center had only a limited number of trunks to distant cities, and if those circuits were busy, the operator would try alternate routings through intermediate cities. The operator would plug into a trunk for the destination city, and the inward operator would answer. The inward operator would obtain the number from the local information operator, and ring the call. Once the called party answered, the originating operator would advise him or her to stand by for the calling party, whom she'd then ring back, and record the starting time, once the conversation began.

 
A large Bell System international switchboard in 1943

In the 1940s, with the advent of dial pulse and multi-frequency operator dialing, the operator would plug into a tandem trunk and dial the NPA (area code) and operator code for the information operator in the distant city. For instance, the New York City information operator was 212-131. If the customer knew the number, and the point was direct-dialable, the operator would dial the call. If the distant city did not have dialable numbers, the operator would dial the code for the inward operator serving the called party, and ask her to ring the number.

In the 1960s, once most phone subscribers had direct long-distance dialing, a single type of operator began to serve both the local and long-distance functions. A customer might call to request a collect call, a call billed to a third number, or a person-to-person call. All toll calls from coin phones required operator assistance. The operator was also available to help complete a local or long-distance number which did not complete. For example, if a customer encountered a reorder tone (a fast busy signal), it could indicate "all circuits busy," or a problem in the destination exchange. The operator might be able to use a different routing to complete the call. If the operator could not get through by dialing the number, she could call the inward operator in the destination city, and ask her to try the number, or to test a line to see if it was busy or out of order.

Cord switchboards used for these purposes were replaced in the 1970s and 1980s by Traffic Service Position System (TSPS) and similar systems, which greatly reduced operator involvement in calls. The customer would, instead of simply dialing "0" for the operator, dial 1+NPA+7digits, after which an operator would answer and provide the desired service (coin collection, obtaining acceptance on a collect call, etc.), and then release the call to be automatically handled by the TSPS.

Before the late 1970s and early 1980s, it was common for many smaller cities to have their own operators. An NPA (area code) would usually have its largest city as its primary toll center, with smaller toll centers serving the secondary cities scattered throughout the NPA. TSPS allowed telephone companies to close smaller toll centers and consolidate operator services in regional centers which might be hundreds of miles from the subscriber.

In the mid-1980s the Bell Operating Companies (BOCs) opened their own Operator Services offices with a system called TOPS (Traffic Operator Position System) to act as local and intraLATA telephone operators. With this the BOCs took intraLATA call traffic from AT&T as well as services which were once provided on a cordboard (Toll Stations, Mobile and Marine [Ship-to-Shore]). Operators from AT&T returned to work for the BOC as the intraLATA traffic was cut to the BOC.

In the early 1990s AT&T replaced TSPS with OSPS (Operator Service Position System). The OSPS position was a computer terminal which the AT&T operator entered billing information. With the advent of OSPS a feature called Interflow allowed operators on a system to answer calls from anywhere within their region.

As technology changed, so did the application of Interflow. Interflow was implemented nationwide by AT&T. This allowed AT&T to close virtually every operator office throughout the US. As of 2004 the only AT&T operator offices remaining were located in Houston, Texas, and Jacksonville, Florida.

Operation edit

 
U.S. Air Force operator works a switchboard in the underground command post at Strategic Air Command headquarters, Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska in 1967.

The switchboard is usually designed to accommodate the operator, who sits facing it. It has a high back panel, which consists of rows of female jacks, each jack designated and wired as a local extension of the switchboard (which serves an individual subscriber) or as an incoming or outgoing trunk line. The jack is also associated with a lamp.

On the table or desk area in front of the operator are columns of 3-position toggle switches termed "keys", lamps, and cords. Each column consists of a front key and a rear key, a front lamp and a rear lamp, followed by a front cord and a rear cord, making up together a cord circuit. The front key is the "talk" key allowing the operator to speak with that particular cord pair. The rear key on older "manual" boards and PBXs is used to ring a telephone physically. On newer boards, the back key is used to collect (retrieve) money from coin telephones. Each of the keys has three positions: back, normal and forward. When a key is in the normal position an electrical talk path connects the front and rear cords. A key in the forward position (front key) connects the operator to the cord pair, and a key in the back position sends a ring signal out on the cord (on older manual exchanges). Each cord has a three-wire TRS phone connector: tip and ring for testing, ringing and voice; and a sleeve wire for busy signals.

When a call is received, a jack lamp lights on the back panel and the operator responds by placing the rear cord into the corresponding jack and throwing the front key forward. The operator then converses with the caller, who informs the operator to whom he or she would like to speak. If it is another extension, the operator places the front cord in the associated jack and pulls the front key backwards to ring the called party. After connecting, the operator leaves both cords "up" with the keys in the normal position so the parties can converse. The supervision lamps light to alert the operator when the parties finish their conversation and go on-hook. Either party could "flash" the operator's supervision lamps by depressing their switch hook for a second and releasing it, in case they needed assistance with a problem. When the operator pulls down a cord, a pulley weight behind the switchboard pulls it down to prevent it from tangling.

On a trunk, on-hook and off-hook signals must pass in both directions. In a one-way trunk, the originating or A board sends a short for off-hook, and an open for on-hook, while the terminating or B board sends normal polarity or reverse polarity. This "reverse battery" signaling was carried over to later automatic exchanges.

Some areas used specialized switchboards to handle calls from payphones. In North America, these "coin boards" were gradually phased out after the introduction of the Automated Coin Toll System that was provided by the Traffic Service Position System. Dedicated coin boards were primarily used in large, densely populated areas such as New York City where the large local calling area required special billing arrangements to allow the rate for a local call to vary based on the distance called. In less densely populated regions, calls from payphones were handled by normal assistance operators without the use of dedicated coin boards.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ G.K. Thompson, R.B. Hill, The First Telephone Switchboard and Its Method of Operation, Bell Telephone Quarterly Volume 9(3), p.205 (July 1930).
  2. ^ "PBS American Experience, The Telephone". PBS.org. Retrieved 2013-08-24.
  3. ^ . PrivateLine.com. Archived from the original on 2013-03-12. Retrieved 2013-09-18.

Further reading edit

  • "Telephone" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 547–557.
  • Atlanta Telephone History: Part 1 - Early Telephone Service especially the section from 1905 on.

telephone, switchboard, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, nov. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Telephone switchboard news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message A telephone switchboard was a device used to connect circuits of telephones to establish telephone calls between users or other switchboards throughout the 20th century The switchboard was an essential component of a manual telephone exchange and was operated by switchboard operators who used electrical cords or switches to establish the connections PBX switchboard 1975The electromechanical automatic telephone exchange invented by Almon Strowger in 1888 gradually replaced manual switchboards in central telephone exchanges around the world In 1919 the Bell System in Canada also adopted automatic switching as its future technology after years of reliance on manual systems Nevertheless many manual branch exchanges remained operational into the second half of the 20th century in many enterprises Later electronic devices and computer technology gave the operator access to an abundance of features A private branch exchange PBX in a business usually has an attendant console or an auto attendant function which bypasses the operator Contents 1 History 2 Operation 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingHistory editThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Telephone operator c 1900Following the invention of the telephone in 1876 the first telephones were rented in pairs which were limited to conversation between the parties operating those two instruments The use of a central exchange was soon found to be even more advantageous than in telegraphy In May 1877 The Holmes Burglar Alarm Company in Boston Massachusetts established by Edwin T Holmes installed the first central office and switchboard that served both as a security service at night for banks and businesses as well as a telephone system 1 The switchboard operated telephone instruments manufactured by Charles Williams a licensee of the Alexander Graham Bell company In January 1878 the Boston Telephone Dispatch company had started hiring boys as telephone operators Boys had been very successful as telegraphy operators but their attitude lack of patience and behavior was unacceptable for live telephone contact 2 so the company began hiring women operators instead Thus on September 1 1878 Boston Telephone Dispatch hired Emma Nutt as the first woman operator Small towns typically had the switchboard installed in the operator s home so that he or she could answer calls on a 24 hour basis In 1894 New England Telephone and Telegraph Company installed the first battery operated switchboard on January 9 in Lexington Massachusetts Early switchboards in large cities usually were mounted floor to ceiling in order to allow the operators to reach all the lines in the exchange The operators were boys who would use a ladder to connect to the higher jacks Late in the 1890s this measure failed to keep up with the increasing number of lines and Milo G Kellogg devised the Divided Multiple Switchboard for operators to work together with a team on the A board and another on the B These operators were almost always women until the early 1970s when men were once again hired 3 Cord switchboards were often referred to as cordboards by telephone company personnel Conversion to Panel switch and other automated switching systems first eliminated the B operator and then usually years later the A Rural and suburban switchboards for the most part remained small and simple In many cases customers knew their operator by name As telephone exchanges converted to automatic dial service switchboards continued to serve specialized purposes Before the advent of direct dialed long distance calls a subscriber would need to contact the long distance operator in order to place a toll call In large cities there was often a special number such as 112 which would ring the long distance operator directly Elsewhere the subscriber would ask the local operator to ring the long distance operator The long distance operator would record the name and city of the person to be called and the operator would advise the calling party to hang up and wait for the call to be completed Each toll center had only a limited number of trunks to distant cities and if those circuits were busy the operator would try alternate routings through intermediate cities The operator would plug into a trunk for the destination city and the inward operator would answer The inward operator would obtain the number from the local information operator and ring the call Once the called party answered the originating operator would advise him or her to stand by for the calling party whom she d then ring back and record the starting time once the conversation began nbsp A large Bell System international switchboard in 1943In the 1940s with the advent of dial pulse and multi frequency operator dialing the operator would plug into a tandem trunk and dial the NPA area code and operator code for the information operator in the distant city For instance the New York City information operator was 212 131 If the customer knew the number and the point was direct dialable the operator would dial the call If the distant city did not have dialable numbers the operator would dial the code for the inward operator serving the called party and ask her to ring the number In the 1960s once most phone subscribers had direct long distance dialing a single type of operator began to serve both the local and long distance functions A customer might call to request a collect call a call billed to a third number or a person to person call All toll calls from coin phones required operator assistance The operator was also available to help complete a local or long distance number which did not complete For example if a customer encountered a reorder tone a fast busy signal it could indicate all circuits busy or a problem in the destination exchange The operator might be able to use a different routing to complete the call If the operator could not get through by dialing the number she could call the inward operator in the destination city and ask her to try the number or to test a line to see if it was busy or out of order Cord switchboards used for these purposes were replaced in the 1970s and 1980s by Traffic Service Position System TSPS and similar systems which greatly reduced operator involvement in calls The customer would instead of simply dialing 0 for the operator dial 1 NPA 7digits after which an operator would answer and provide the desired service coin collection obtaining acceptance on a collect call etc and then release the call to be automatically handled by the TSPS Before the late 1970s and early 1980s it was common for many smaller cities to have their own operators An NPA area code would usually have its largest city as its primary toll center with smaller toll centers serving the secondary cities scattered throughout the NPA TSPS allowed telephone companies to close smaller toll centers and consolidate operator services in regional centers which might be hundreds of miles from the subscriber In the mid 1980s the Bell Operating Companies BOCs opened their own Operator Services offices with a system called TOPS Traffic Operator Position System to act as local and intraLATA telephone operators With this the BOCs took intraLATA call traffic from AT amp T as well as services which were once provided on a cordboard Toll Stations Mobile and Marine Ship to Shore Operators from AT amp T returned to work for the BOC as the intraLATA traffic was cut to the BOC In the early 1990s AT amp T replaced TSPS with OSPS Operator Service Position System The OSPS position was a computer terminal which the AT amp T operator entered billing information With the advent of OSPS a feature called Interflow allowed operators on a system to answer calls from anywhere within their region As technology changed so did the application of Interflow Interflow was implemented nationwide by AT amp T This allowed AT amp T to close virtually every operator office throughout the US As of 2004 update the only AT amp T operator offices remaining were located in Houston Texas and Jacksonville Florida Operation edit nbsp U S Air Force operator works a switchboard in the underground command post at Strategic Air Command headquarters Offutt Air Force Base Nebraska in 1967 The switchboard is usually designed to accommodate the operator who sits facing it It has a high back panel which consists of rows of female jacks each jack designated and wired as a local extension of the switchboard which serves an individual subscriber or as an incoming or outgoing trunk line The jack is also associated with a lamp On the table or desk area in front of the operator are columns of 3 position toggle switches termed keys lamps and cords Each column consists of a front key and a rear key a front lamp and a rear lamp followed by a front cord and a rear cord making up together a cord circuit The front key is the talk key allowing the operator to speak with that particular cord pair The rear key on older manual boards and PBXs is used to ring a telephone physically On newer boards the back key is used to collect retrieve money from coin telephones Each of the keys has three positions back normal and forward When a key is in the normal position an electrical talk path connects the front and rear cords A key in the forward position front key connects the operator to the cord pair and a key in the back position sends a ring signal out on the cord on older manual exchanges Each cord has a three wire TRS phone connector tip and ring for testing ringing and voice and a sleeve wire for busy signals When a call is received a jack lamp lights on the back panel and the operator responds by placing the rear cord into the corresponding jack and throwing the front key forward The operator then converses with the caller who informs the operator to whom he or she would like to speak If it is another extension the operator places the front cord in the associated jack and pulls the front key backwards to ring the called party After connecting the operator leaves both cords up with the keys in the normal position so the parties can converse The supervision lamps light to alert the operator when the parties finish their conversation and go on hook Either party could flash the operator s supervision lamps by depressing their switch hook for a second and releasing it in case they needed assistance with a problem When the operator pulls down a cord a pulley weight behind the switchboard pulls it down to prevent it from tangling On a trunk on hook and off hook signals must pass in both directions In a one way trunk the originating or A board sends a short for off hook and an open for on hook while the terminating or B board sends normal polarity or reverse polarity This reverse battery signaling was carried over to later automatic exchanges Some areas used specialized switchboards to handle calls from payphones In North America these coin boards were gradually phased out after the introduction of the Automated Coin Toll System that was provided by the Traffic Service Position System Dedicated coin boards were primarily used in large densely populated areas such as New York City where the large local calling area required special billing arrangements to allow the rate for a local call to vary based on the distance called In less densely populated regions calls from payphones were handled by normal assistance operators without the use of dedicated coin boards See also editTelephone in United States historyReferences edit G K Thompson R B Hill The First Telephone Switchboard and Its Method of Operation Bell Telephone Quarterly Volume 9 3 p 205 July 1930 PBS American Experience The Telephone PBS org Retrieved 2013 08 24 Telephone History AT amp T s First Male Operator PrivateLine com Archived from the original on 2013 03 12 Retrieved 2013 09 18 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manual telephone exchanges Telephone Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed 1911 pp 547 557 Atlanta Telephone History Part 1 Early Telephone Service especially the section from 1905 on Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Telephone switchboard amp oldid 1179096125, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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