Forgotten New York

DISAPPEARING PHONE BOOTHS

There was a time, not so long ago, when you could enter an eight-foot tall booth, some wooden, some made of aluminum, and shut out the noise, confusion and chaos of the city while you made a phone call. And, you didn’t have to bother the people sitting or standing near you with your loud yapping. Convenience trumps civility every time, and everywhere has been noisier by a large quantum beginning in the 1990s when the mobile phone revolution took place.

They called them “phone booths.” The telephone company even provided phone books for you. A dime got you about five minutes, and if you needed more time…well, you only needed another dime.

 

In 2002, there was a remaining booth in the IND subway stop at 6th Avenue and 57th Street

 

When did we first notice that phone booths were inexorably shrinking, and increasingly replaced by ever smaller mounted public telephones? Could it have been that scene in the first Christopher Reeve Superman movie in 1978? Lois Lane was in a helicopter accident and was dangling 30 floors above Metropolis. Clark Kent knew what to do…he had to become Superman, and fast. He headed immediately for a phone booth. He could only find one of those miniature hooded phones, and looked around for another option.

Cartoon: NY Daily News, Jan. 4, 2003

 

This is now pretty much the standard-issue NYC phone “booth”. It offers rather perfunctory protection from the elements, and its side panels can be used for advertising. Its “hood” actually is somewhat more roomy that models from the 1980s, which offered protection only for the telephone handset and cradle.

 

A bank of booths in a midtown basement. This photo was sent to me quite awhile ago, so if anyone can identify the location, drop me a line.

Phone booths probably met their Waterloo because of events beginning in the 1980s. Drug transactions took place in phone booths; the homeless took up residence in them; and increasing use of wireless portable phones in the mid-1990s made roomy booths an increasing anachronism.

Will we be seeing a day soon when public telephones will be eliminated, with commercial interests assuming the proliferance of cellular phones has rendered them completely unnecessary? Your webmaster hopes not.

The days when a person wishing to make a call would go into a booth, close the door and have whatever he or she was saying, in whatever volume, blessedly isolated from others are as over as, well, the dime public phone call. And it’s a shame.

Do I sound 55?

 

Ghosts of New York City phone companies past…

When I first started handing over my hard-earned to pay for telephone service, I simply made out checks to New York Telephone. Simple, huh? But then began a parade of names that would earn you a lot of points in Scrabble. First came Nynex, then Bell Atlantic (which boasted a nice blue-green logo) and lately, Verizon. Phone company names have a shelf life of about three years; then comes another takeover, and the million-dollar poobah at the top dreams up another goofy name.

 

Emmons Avenue near Nostrand Avenue, Sheepshead Bay

 

In the Swingin’ Sixties, some hep, happenin’ phone shelter designs started to appear, like this pod-shaped item on East 46th Street between 5th and Madison. A similar model had been mounted for years at Clark Street and Columbia Heights in Brooklyn, but it was recently taken down.

 

Pierrepont Terrace and Montague Street, Brooklyn Heights

 

This item on West 66th Street provides little in shelter and seems to exist mainly to mount two large ad billboards.

 

Perfection. Phone booths at New York Public Library on 5th Avenue, where quiet is still treasured. Go in…close the door…and talk all you want.

Private wood booths like this can still be found in bars around town.

 

Some full-size phone booths are still around, like this one on West End Avenue and West 65th Street. It’s missing the one item that would make it completely indispensable, though…a door.

I dig telephone innovations like the death of rotary phones, which were really rough on the fingers. Touch tone, introduced in 1963, is the cat’s meow. I also don’t yearn for the days of party lines or having the operator put through every private call. But the demise of the private phone booth is a shameful thing: detrimental to societal comity.

I rarely talk out loud on a cellphone unless I have to. I go where I won’t bother anyone. I wish everyone would extend that courtesy.

Recommended reading…

Going, Going, Gone: Vanishing Americana, Susan Jonas and Marilyn Nissenson, Chronicle Books 1998
BUY this book at Amazon.COM

1/1/2003

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