The Party Line
I have a fancy schmancy cell phone but not one of those that can walk the dog and use a pooper scoop. I’ll be the first to admit I don’t have the tecknohow of those that use one. (Is tecknohow a word or did I just make it up.)
Diving into the pool of memories (yes, Robin, like a pensieve) I am amused and somewhat nostalgic about how simple phones used to be.
My childhood introduction to telephones was on a party line. There were anywhere from two-party to ten-party lines. Ours was four-party: Our family, Our Uncle and Aunt, The Eldridges, and a woman who lived across the small valley.
There was a certain protocol involved when you picked up the receiver. First, you listened before you started dialing. Yes. You could pick up the phone right in the middle of your neighbors conversation. Second, the interrupted party would often say something to make sure you would hang up. Like “Hang up!” Third, it was polite to say excuse me and discreetly replace the receiver on the cradle and try again later.
The Eldridge family had teen-age boys with the mandatory hormones. I thought they were all like James Dean with their dirty blond hair greased back and cigarettes rolled up in their sleeves. They tied the party line up while sweet-talking in the evening with their girlfriends.
Mom didn’t have much time to waste on the phone, so she would get disgusted when she wanted to make a brief call to her sister and those “darn Eldridge boys” were hogging the line again.
It's not as though the boys weren’t aware of other people’s impatience with their lengthy love chats. A party line phone coming off the hook made a very conspicuous ‘click’.
Not everyone was nice about it. One night my Uncle Dell told the boys to get off the line. That resulted in a party-line squabble that included a few weeks of “clicking” and strange noises interrupting personal calls.
The provocation prompted my brothers, Mike and Nick, to hatch the perfect scheme. They unscrewed the telephone mouthpiece and removed the little round part that I assume was the microphone. They could then pick up the phone, click the button to imitate a hang up, and laugh out-loud while they listened to the Eldridge boys making lovey dovey on the phone to their sweethearts. It was great entertainment. Later, Mike would entertain us by mimicking them and making kissy smoochy sounds.
The fun came to an abrupt halt one evening when mom ran to answer the phone and discovered it still in pieces.
Aunt Myrtle must have heard about the little snooping game we played. If anyone picked up the phone during one of her calls, she would shout, “Mike, is that you!”
An acquaintance approached mom one day with a strange request. She wanted mom to “eavesdrop” on the calls of the widow that shared our party line. She suspected her husband and the woman were having an affair. I think my mom was speechless at the audacity of the request. She declined, of course.
An oft heard and repeated urban legend told of an old woman who used her party line phone to gossip incessantly. A young man, who was fed up with the busybody, pretended there was an emergency so that she would release the line. Naturally, she listened in when he placed his call. She was ticked!! A few days later his wife fell deathly ill; the situation was urgent. As luck would have it, the old biddy was on the phone. His pleading for the phone line received a haughty and adamant refusal. The man’s wife died and the next day someone murdered the old woman using a tire iron.
Hearing this spooky story, you may understand my childish relief when the telephone company put in a private line. I still remember that new number:
Here is some irony. Back then there were four families sharing one phone line. Now the hubby and I are one family sharing four phone lines. We have our regular landline (with four phones), our fax machine line, andwe each have a personal cell phone.
Hello!
Comments
Interesting story!! It's amazing to think about how technology has changed in the past few decades.
I want to hear more about the James Dean lookin' fellars with greased back hair.
Those Eldridge boys...sound like hoodlum Cassinovas to me! ;)
So glad I never had to live with party lines, but it is amazing how far phones have come over the decades. I still remember our big old dial phone- the basic square model.
And I smiled when you quoted your old phone number because...in grade school, you could reach me at UL2-6731. :)
Oh, and thank you so much for visiting the birthday tribute to my mom...and for leaving Happy B-day wishes on her site, too! I so appreciate that, Pamela!
Blessings!
We had a boy on our party line, we called him Turle Face. He would talk to his girlfriend and we would listen. They figured out what we were doing and then learned to speak french so we couldn't understand. !!!
My husband and I occasionally watch this show called 2057, which goes through some of the possible scenarios technologically for the world in 50 years. It's crazy! Everything technological. Cars that drive themselves, video phones that you talk on from a glove you wear on your hand, elevator rides to space, robots (of course), holograms that act as playmates and GPS systems. Everything seems so impersonal. Then again, 50 years ago, people would have thought the idea of having blogging buddies crazy.
I love the new techo era. I have always been a phone girl... and now I am on it seemingly 24/7... in reality probably 12/7.
We also have way too many phones. I think as time goes on the tech will catch up and we will have one phone that does it all for us. (I am looking forward to that so I only need one charger when I travel!!)
Happy Friday!!
When I was growing up I had twin friends who lived 5 miles further out in the country than me, they had a party line.In fact, they had a party line until 1987!!!
good party line etiquette is a MUST :)
I love my cewll phone, I am addicted........
Remember when you could punch a combination of buttons and make your own phone ring.
Ring Ring...
Karmyn: Hello
prankster: Is your refrigerator running?
Karmyn: Yes
prankster: Well then you better go catch it.
My grandmother lived in such a small town, all of the telephones had the same prefix, so you only had to dial the last four digits!
Thanks for sharing! I appreciate you stopping by my blog.
Hope you have a wonderful day!
People can be so rude. I hate anything that abrogates my independence and privacy. Everything about my life is about independence right now. And convenience.
We didn't even have a telephone, there was one cabin on the street in front of the apartments and when you had something to say to your neighbor, you just went over. The first telephone my parents owned was in 1959 when we moved to Brussels. And now ... !
That story is funny:) well not the end part that was as you said spooky
ivy