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Template:For Template:Use dmy dates This timeline of the telephone covers landline, radio, and cellular telephony technologies and provides many important dates in the history of the telephone.

File:JPReis.jpg
Johann Philipp Reis
File:Alexander Graham Bell.jpg
Alexander Graham Bell
File:Thomas watson.jpg
Thomas Augustus Watson
File:Tivadar Puskas.jpg
Tivadar Puskás
File:Charles Sumner Tainter.jpg
Charles Sumner Tainter

1667 to 1875Edit

An Early History of the Telephone: 1664–1866: Robert Hooke's Acoustic Experiments and Acoustic Inventions (archived from the original on 18 June 2013), Columbia University website. Retrieved 15 January 2013.</ref><ref name="ScottishPostOffice">Giles, Arthur (editor). County Directory of Scotland (for 1901–1904): Twelfth Issue: Telephone (Scottish Post Office Directories), Edinburgh: R. Grant & Son, 1902, p. 28.</ref>

  • 1844: Innocenzo Manzetti first suggests the idea of an electric "speaking telegraph", or telephone.
  • 1849: Antonio Meucci developed a voice-communication apparatus that several sources credit as the first telephone.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • 1854: Charles Bourseul publishes a description of a make-and-break telephone transmitter and receiver in L'Illustration, (Paris) but does not construct a working instrument.
  • 1854: Meucci demonstrates an electric voice-operated device in New York, but it is not clear what kind of device he demonstrated.
  • 1860: Johann Philipp Reis of Germany demonstrates a make-and-break transmitter after the design of Bourseul and a knitting-needle receiver. Witnesses said they heard human voices being transmitted.
  • 1861: Johann Philipp Reis transfers voice electrically over a distance of 340 feet with his Reis telephone. To prove that speech can be recognized successfully at the receiving end, he uses the phrase "The horse does not eat cucumber salad" as an example because this phrase is hard to understand acoustically in German.
  • 1864: In an attempt to give his musical automaton a voice, Innocenzo Manzetti invents the 'speaking telegraph'. He shows no interest in patenting his device, but it is reported in newspapers.
  • 1865: Meucci reads of Manzetti's invention and writes to the editors of two newspapers claiming priority and quoting his first experiment in 1849. He writes "I do not wish to deny Mr. Manzetti his invention, I only wish to observe that two thoughts could be found to contain the same discovery, and that by uniting the two ideas one can more easily reach the certainty about a thing this important."
  • 1871: Meucci files a patent caveat (a statement of intention to file a patent application)<ref>Text of Meucci's Caveat, pages 16-18.</ref> for a Sound Telegraph, but it does not describe an electromagnetic telephone.
  • 1872: Elisha Gray founds the Western Electric Manufacturing Company.
  • 1872: Professor Vanderwyde demonstrates Reis's telephone in New York.
  • July 1873: Thomas Edison notes varying resistance in carbon grains due to pressure, and builds a rheostat based on the principle but abandons it because of its sensitivity to vibration.
  • May 1874: Gray invents an electromagnet device for transmitting musical tones. Some of his receivers use a metallic diaphragm.
  • July 1874: Alexander Graham Bell conceives the theoretical concept for the telephone while vacationing at his parents' farm near Brantford, Ontario, Canada. Alexander Melville Bell records notes of his son's conversation in his personal journal.
  • 29 December 1874: Gray demonstrates his musical tones device and transmits "familiar melodies through telegraph wire" at the Presbyterian Church in Highland Park, Illinois.
  • 4 May 1875: Bell conceives of using varying resistance in a wire conducting electric current to create a varying current amplitude.<ref>Bruce (1990), pages 144-145.</ref>
  • 2 June 1875: Bell transmits the sound of a plucked steel reed using electromagnet instruments.
  • 1 July 1875: Bell uses a bi-directional "gallows" telephone that was able to transmit "indistinct but voice-like sounds" rather than clear speech. Both the transmitter and the receiver were identical membrane electromagnet instruments.
  • 1875: Thomas Edison experiments with acoustic telegraphy and, in November, builds an electro-dynamic receiver but does not exploit it.

1876 to 1878Edit

  • 11 February 1876: Elisha Gray invents a liquid transmitter for use with a telephone, but he did not make one.
  • 14 February 1876
    • about 9:30Template:Nbspam: Gray or his lawyer brings Gray's patent caveat for the telephone to the Washington, D.C. Patent Office (a caveat was a notice of intention to file a patent application. It was like a patent application, but without a request for examination, for the purpose of notifying the patent office of a possible invention in process).
    • about 11:30Template:Nbspam: Bell's lawyer brings to the same patent office Bell's patent application for the telephone. Bell's lawyer requests that it be registered immediately in the cash receipts blotter.
    • about 1:30Template:Nbsppm: Approximately two hours later Elisha Gray's patent caveat is registered in the cash blotter. Although his caveat was not a full application, Gray could have converted it into a patent application and contested Bell's priority, but did not do so because of advice from his lawyer and his involvement with acoustic telegraphy. The result was that the patent was awarded to Bell.<ref>Hounshell, David A. 1975. "Elisha Gray and the Telephone: On the Disadvantages of Being an Expert", Technology and Culture, 1975, Vol. 16, No. 2, pp. 133–161.</ref>
  • 7 March 1876: Bell's U.S. Patent, No. 174,465 for the telephone is granted.
  • 10 March 1876: Bell first successfully transmits speech, saying "Mr. Watson, come here! I want to see you!" using a liquid transmitter as described in Gray's caveat, and Bell's own electromagnetic receiver.
  • 16 May 1876: Thomas Edison files first patent application for acoustic telegraphy for which U.S. patent 182,996 was granted 10 October 1876.
  • 25 June 1876: Bell exhibits his telephone at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia, where it draws enthusiastic reactions from Emperor Dom Pedro II of Brazil and Lord Kelvin, attracting the attention of the press and resulting in the first announcements of the invention to the general public. Lord Kelvin describes the telephone as "the greatest by far of all the marvels of the electric telegraph".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • 10 August 1876: Alexander Graham Bell makes the world's first long-distance telephone call, one-way, not reciprocal, over a distance of about 6 miles, between Brantford and Paris, Ontario, Canada.
  • 1876: Hungarian Tivadar Puskás invents the telephone switchboard exchange (later working with Edison).
  • 9 October 1876: Bell makes the first two-way long-distance telephone call between Cambridge and Boston, Massachusetts.
  • October 1876: Edison tests his first carbon microphone.
  • 1877: The first experimental telephone exchange in Boston.
  • 20 January 1877: Edison "first [succeeds] in transmitting over wires many articulated sentences" using carbon granules as a pressure-sensitive varying resistance under the pressure of a diaphragm.<ref>Josephson, p. 143.</ref>
  • 30 January 1877: Bell's U.S. Patent No. 186,787 is granted for an electromagnetic telephone using permanent magnets, iron diaphragms, and a call bell.
  • 4 March 1877: Emile Berliner invents a microphone based on "loose contact" between two metal electrodes, an improvement on Reis' Telephone, and in April 1877 files a caveat of an invention in process.
  • April 1877: A telephone line connects the workshop of Charles Williams, Jr., located in Boston, to his house in Somerville, Massachusetts, at 109 Court Street in Boston, where Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Watson had previously experimented with their telephone. The telephones became No. 1 and 2 in the Bell Telephone Company.<ref>John Lossing, Woodrow Wilson. Harpers' Encyclopædia Of United States From 458 A. D. To 1905, Harper & Brothers, 1905. Original from Pennsylvania State University, Digitized: 25 June 2009.</ref>
  • 27 April 1877: Edison files telephone patent applications. U.S. patents (Nos. 474,230, 474,231 and 474,232) were awarded to Edison in 1892 over the competing claims of Alexander Graham Bell, Emile Berliner, Elisha Gray, Amos Dolbear, J.W. McDonagh, G.B. Richmond, W.L.W. Voeker, J.H. Irwin and Francis Blake Jr.<ref>Edison, Thomas A. 1880. The Speaking Telephone Interferences, Evidence for Thomas A. Edison. Vol. 1 (jpg image), [cited 21 April 2006].</ref> Edison's carbon granules transmitter and Bell's electromagnetic receiver are used, with improvements, by the Bell system for many decades thereafter.<ref>Josephson, p. 146.</ref>
  • 4 June 1877: Emile Berliner files telephone patent application that includes a carbon microphone transmitter.
  • 9 July 1877: The Bell Telephone Company, a common law joint-stock company, is organized by Alexander Graham Bell's future father-in-law Gardiner Greene Hubbard, a lawyer who becomes its first president.
  • 6 October 1877: the Scientific American publishes the invention from Bell – at that time still without a ringer.
  • 25 October 1877: the article in the Scientific American is discussed at the Telegraphenamt in Berlin
  • November 1877: First permanent telephone connection in UK between two business in Manchester using imported Bell instruments.
  • 12 November 1877: The first commercial telephone company enters telephone business in Friedrichsberg close to Berlin<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> using the Siemens pipe as ringer and telephone devices built by Siemens.

  • 1 December 1877: Western Union enters the telephone business using Edison's superior carbon microphone transmitter.
  • 14 January 1878: Bell demonstrates the device to Queen Victoria and gives her an opportunity to try it. Calls are made to Cowes, Southampton and London, the first long-distance calls in the UK.<ref>Alexander Graham Bell demonstrates the newly invented telephone</ref> The queen asks to buy the equipment that was used, but Bell offers to make a model specifically for her.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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1879 to 1919Edit

File:Bell telephone magazine (1922) (14756440715).jpg
Alexander Graham Bell at the opening of the first New York – Chicago telephone line (October 18, 1892)

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  • 11 October 1881: The Sydney telephone exchange opened with 12 subscribers.
  • 1882: A telephone company—an American Bell Telephone Company affiliate—is set up in Mexico City.
  • 14 May 1883: The Adelaide exchange was opened, with 48 subscribers.<ref name="FirstAust" />
  • 7 September 1883: The Port Adelaide exchange was opened, with 21 subscribers.<ref name="FirstAust" />
  • 4 September 1884: Opening of telephone service between New York and Boston (235 miles).<ref name="Bell1953">Template:Cite book</ref>
  • 3 March 1885: The American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) is incorporated as the long-distance division of American Bell Telephone Company. It will become the head of the Bell System on the last day of 1899.
  • 1886: Gilliland's Automatic circuit changer is put into service between Worcester and Leicester featuring the first operator dialing allowing one operator to run two exchanges.
  • 1887: Tivadar Puskás introduced the multiplex switchboard, that had an epochal significance in the further development of telephone exchange.<ref>Francis S. Wagner: Hungarian Contributions to World Civilization – Page 68</ref>
  • 13 January 1887: the Government of the United States moves to annul the master patent issued to Alexander Graham Bell on the grounds of fraud and misrepresentation. The case, known as the 'Government Case', is later dropped after it was revealed that the U.S. Attorney General, Augustus Hill Garland had been given millions of dollars of stock in the company trying to unseat Bell's telephone patent.
  • 1888: Telephone patent court cases are confirmed by the Supreme Court, see The Telephone Cases
  • 1889: AT&T becomes the overall holding company for all the Bell companies.
  • 2 November 1889: A.G. Smith patents a telegraph switch which provides for trunks between groups of selectors allowing for the first time, fewer trunks than there are lines, and automatic selection of an idle trunk.
  • 10 March 1891: Almon Strowger patents the Strowger switch the first Automatic telephone exchange.
  • 30 October 1891: The independent Strowger Automatic Telephone Exchange Company is formed.
  • 3 May 1892: Thomas Edison awarded patents for the carbon microphone based on applications lodged in 1877.
  • 18 October 1892: Opening of telephone service between New York and Chicago (950 miles).<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 3 November 1892: The first Strowger switch goes into operation in LaPorte, Indiana, with 75 subscribers and capacity for 99.
  • 30 January 1894: The second fundamental Bell patent for the telephone expires; Independent telephone companies established, and independent manufacturing companies (Stromberg-Carlson in 1894 and Kellogg Switchboard & Supply Company in 1897).
  • 30 December 1899: American Bell Telephone Company is purchased by its own long-distance subsidiary, American Telephone and Telegraph (AT&T) to bypass state regulations limiting capitalization. AT&T assumes leadership role of the Bell System.
  • 25 December 1900: John W. Atkins, the manager at International Ocean Telegraph Company (IOTC), a subsidiary of Western Union Telegraph Company made the first international telephone call over telegraph cable at 09:55 from his office in Key West to Havana, Cuba.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Atkins was reported in the Florida Times Union and Citizen as saying, "For a long time there was no sound, except the roar heard at night sometimes, caused by electric light current." He continued calling Cuba and finally came back the words, clear and distinct: "I don't understand you."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • 27 February 1901: United States Court of Appeal declares void Emile Berliner's patent for a telephone transmitter used by the Bell telephone system
  • 1902: The first Australian interstate calls between Mount Gambier and Nelson.<ref name="FirstAust" />
  • 26 February 1914: Boston-Washington underground cable commenced commercial service.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 16 January 1915: The first automatic Panel exchange was installed at the Mulberry Central Office in Newark, New Jersey; but was a semi-automatic system using non-dial telephones.
  • 25 January 1915: First transcontinental telephone call (3600 miles), with Thomas Augustus Watson at 333 Grant Avenue in San Francisco receiving a call from Alexander Graham Bell at 15 Dey Street in New York City, facilitated by a newly invented vacuum tube amplifier.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • 21 October 1915: First transmission of speech across the Atlantic Ocean by radiotelephone from Arlington, Virginia to Paris, France.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 1919: The first rotary dial telephones in the Bell System installed in Norfolk, Virginia. Telephones that lacked dials and touch-tone pads were no longer made by the Bell System after 1978.Template:Citation needed
  • 1919: AT&T conducts more than 4,000 measurements of people's heads to gauge the best dimensions of standard headsets so that callers' lips would be near the microphone when holding handsets up to their ears.<ref>
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1920 to 1969Edit

  • 16 July 1920: World's first radiotelephone service commences public service between Los Angeles and Santa Catalina Island.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 11 April 1921: Opening of deep sea cable from Key West, Florida, to Havana, Cuba (115 miles).<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 22 December 1923: Opening of second transcontinental telephone line via a southern route.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 7 March 1926: First transatlantic telephone call, from London to New York.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • 7 January 1927: Transatlantic telephone service inaugurated for commercial service (3500 miles).<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 17 January 1927: Opening of third transcontinental telephone line via a northern route.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 7 April 1927: world's first videophone call via an electro-mechanical AT&T unit, from Washington, D.C. to New York City, by then-Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover.<ref>"2-Way Television in Phoning Tested", The New York Times, 10 April 1930, p. 25 (subscription);</ref><ref name="NYT19270408a">"Washington Hails The Test: Operator There Puts Through the Calls as Scientists Watch", The New York Times, 8 April 1927, p. 20 (subscription)</ref>
  • 8 December 1929: Opening of commercial ship-to-shore telephone service.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 3 April 1930: Opening of transoceanic telephone service to Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay and subsequently to all other South American countries.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 1931: The Ericsson DBH 1001 telephone was the first telephone without a separate ringer box.<ref>Phone Finds Its Iconic Form - Cooper Hewitt</ref>
  • 25 April 1935: First telephone call around the world by wire and radio.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 1937: The Western Electric type 302 telephone becomes available for service in the United States.
  • 8 December 1937: Opening of fourth transcontinental telephone line.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 1941: Multi-frequency dialing introduced for operators in Baltimore, Maryland
  • 1942: Telephone production is halted at Western Electric until 1945 for civilian distribution due to the retooling of factories for military equipment during World War II.
  • 1946: National Numbering Plan (area codes)
  • 1946: first commercial mobile phone call
  • 1946: Bell Labs develops the germanium point-contact transistor
  • 1947: December, W. Rae Young and Douglas H. Ring, Bell Labs engineers, proposed hexagonal cells for provisioning of mobile telephone service.
  • 1948: Phil Porter, a Bell Labs engineer, proposed that cell towers be at the corners of the hexagons rather than the centers and have directional antennas pointing in 3 directions.
  • 1950: The Western Electric Type 500 telephone becomes available in the United States after announcement in 1949.
  • 30 June 1948: First public demonstration of the transistor by Bell Telephone Laboratories.<ref name="Bell1953"/>
  • 10 November 1951: direct distance dialing (DDD) first offered on trial basis at Englewood, New Jersey, to 11 selected major cities across the United States; this service grew rapidly across major cities during the 1950s
  • 1955: the laying of trans-Atlantic cable TAT-1 began – 36 circuits, later increased to 48 by reducing the bandwidth from 4 kHz to 3 kHz
  • 1957: First semiconductor oxiode(silicon dioxide) planar transitors by Frosch and Derick at Bell Labs.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • 1958: Modems used for direct connection via voice phone lines
  • 1959: The Princess telephone is introduced in the Bell System in the United States.
  • 1959: UKs first public car radio-telephone service opens in Liverpool and Manchester
  • 1959: Following Frosch and Derick research at Bell Labs,<ref name="Lojek12022">Template:Cite book</ref> Mohamed Atalla and Dawon Kahng proposed a silicon MOS transistor in 1959 at Bell Labs.<ref name="Bassett222">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
  • 1960: A working MOSFET is built by a team at Bell Labs. E. E. LaBate and E. I. Povilonis made the device; M. O. Thurston, L. A. D’Asaro, and J. R. Ligenza developed the diffusion processes, and H. K. Gummel and R. Lindner characterized the device.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • 1 November 1960: The Bell System begins testing its push-button phone, starting with service in Findlay, Ohio.<ref>"Phone Without Dial Makes Bow in Ohio", by Jim Flanagan, Cleveland Plain Dealer, February 27, 1961, p.1 ("The Ohio Bell Telephone Co. began installations Nov. 1.")</ref>
  • 1960: Bell Labs conducts extensive field trial of an electronic central office in Morris, Illinois, known at the Morris System.
  • 1960s: Bell Labs developed the electronics for cellular phones
  • 1961: Initiation of Touch-Tone service trials
  • 1962: T-1 service in Skokie, Illinois
  • 18 November 1963: AT&T commences the first subscriber Touch-Tone service in the towns of Carnegie and Greensburg, Pennsylvania, using push-button telephones that replaced rotary dial instruments.
  • 31 May 1965: The world's first electronic switching system commences commercial service in Succasunna, New Jersey, in form of the 1ESS.
  • 1965: first geosynchronous communications satellite – 240 circuits or one TV signal
  • 1965: The Trimline telephone is introduced by Western Electric for use in the Bell System.

1970 to 1999Edit

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2000 to presentEdit

See alsoEdit

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NotesEdit

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BibliographyEdit

  • Bourseul, Charles (1854), Transmission électrique de la parole, Paris: L'Illustration, 26 August 1854.Template:In lang
  • Thompson, Sylvanus P. (1883), Philipp Reis, Inventor of the Telephone, London: E. & F. N. Spon, 1883.
  • Coe, Lewis (1995), The Telephone and Its Several Inventors: A History, North Carolina: McFarland, 1995. Template:ISBN
  • Baker, Burton H. (2000), The Gray Matter: The Forgotten Story of the Telephone, Telepress, St. Joseph, Michigan, 2000. Template:ISBN
  • Josephson, Matthew (1992), Edison: A Biography, Wiley, Template:ISBN
  • Bruce, Robert V. (1990), Bell: Alexander Bell and the Conquest of Solitude, Cornell University Press, 1990. Template:ISBN
  • Farley, Tom (2007), "The Cell-Phone Revolution", Invention & Technology, Winter 2007, vol. 22:3, pages 8–19.

External linksEdit

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