Re: 1960s Long Distance From San Francisco

Anthony Bellanga had written:

Note that San Francisco/Oakland was using N11 codes in the 1930s > rather than the "step-by-step" format of 11X codes. N11 codes in use > prior to the 1960s is an indication that the location developed with > Panel and/or #1XB rather than SXS switching.

Indeed, true: The 1935 telephone directory already had the familiar

211, 411, and 611 codes.

Also, you mentioned some NN0 central office codes. These were highly

> discouraged by AT&T for use until the 1960s/70s time period.

I actually saw only one, and that was 530. It appeared only in the

1965 directory. It was gone in the 1966 directory. The reverse listings going up to 1974 show no 530-xxxx numbers. Yet, in retrospect, it clearly was contemplated for expansion in this area (OKLDCA13) because it's one of the currently common prefixes for the Fruitvale rate-center/OKLDCA13 combination, along with the original 531 which apparently served the area's needs for some time.

Mark Roberts | "A man does not show his greatness by being at one extremity, Oakland, Cal.| but rather by touching both at once." NO HTML MAIL | -- Blaise Pascal Permission to archive this article in any form is hereby explicitly denied.

Reply to
Mark Roberts
Loading thread data ...

Cabling-Design.com Forums website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.