cornutt
Well-known member
AFAIK, frequency ringing was mainly a Strowger / Automatic Electric thing. WE switches mainly did selective ringing by using different combinations of tip/ring/ground for the ring voltage. The AE system could do selective ringing on an 8-party line, which the WE system couldn't do.
I remember us being on a party line in north Alabama when I was very young, 1960-61 It was a frequency ringing system, but there were only two parties on the line. When the other party was called, if you were near the phone, you could hear the ringer hum. In 1962, the other party switched to a private line service. For several years afterward, we were the only party on the line, which my dad like because we in effect had a private line at the cost of a party line. Around 1965 Southern Bell started eliminating in-town party lines, and they made everyone who still had one switch to a private line.
As far as the rural exchanges go, there was a company called Kellogg (not the cereal company) which sold tons of manual switchboards and phones to rural co-ops and private telephone companies. At one time, this was a booming business for them. If you looked in on a co-op exchange in the U.S. anytime between about 1900 and 1950, it probably had Kellogg switching equipment.
I remember us being on a party line in north Alabama when I was very young, 1960-61 It was a frequency ringing system, but there were only two parties on the line. When the other party was called, if you were near the phone, you could hear the ringer hum. In 1962, the other party switched to a private line service. For several years afterward, we were the only party on the line, which my dad like because we in effect had a private line at the cost of a party line. Around 1965 Southern Bell started eliminating in-town party lines, and they made everyone who still had one switch to a private line.
As far as the rural exchanges go, there was a company called Kellogg (not the cereal company) which sold tons of manual switchboards and phones to rural co-ops and private telephone companies. At one time, this was a booming business for them. If you looked in on a co-op exchange in the U.S. anytime between about 1900 and 1950, it probably had Kellogg switching equipment.