

Are you referring to somewhere other than the U.S? I'm guessing yes. Is the first letter in your description from the Russian alphabet? Thanks.Masha wrote: ↑September 11th, 2023, 3:29 pmIt is: Багта-50 manufactured in: 1955. They were in use well into the 1970s.
Lucy's phone is more stylistically advanced that Masha's phone IMO. The latter phone was apparently made in Russia, there are Russian characters on the phone, probably numerals. Comparatively, it looks like an older style, something vintage and nice, but older. Take another good look at it. Anyway, it's all good. If a collector were to see it at a garage sale or an antique store perhaps, he/she would snap it up in a trice. Even back then.
It was made by: VEF in: Latvia when that country was an: SSR.
Eavesdropping was not an option. We did not have extension telephone.
Question here, Masha:Masha wrote: ↑September 11th, 2023, 8:16 pmEavesdropping was not an option. We did not have extension telephone.
The majority of its use was for the general manager of the hotel where my father worked to call at dawn wanting to know wth occurred on my father's shift. My father did use it on occasion to inform my mother that he would not be home because of a problem which would take many hours to put to bed.
We were not enamored of it because it was a herald of bad tidings.
Our first telephone was a private line because it was installed so that my father could be reached at any hour. "Work-related" was a powerful conjuring for accessing privileges beyond a person's normal allotments.Dargo wrote: ↑September 11th, 2023, 10:46 pm
Did they have during your youth there in Ukraine what I remember in my youth in L.A. as being what we called a "party line"? This being a system in which in order to save on one's monthly phone bill, one would first have to pick up the receiver and listen for a second to become aware if some neighbor of yours who shared the same line was already using it. And so, you'd have to wait to use the phone until their conversation had been completed.
And so if there were ones like this in your old stomping grounds, was the phone in your household setup in this manner?
(...and if you're a fan of the old 'Alfred Hickcock Presents' TV series, you then might recall that this sort of thing is a major plot point in one of its episodes, and with a busybody eavesdropper getting her just desserts at the end of it)
Haha, we had a party line, it's all my Mom could afford. I feel SO SORRY for the people we shared with for my teenage years! Teens talk about nothing for HOURS!
On a rotary phone, the 1 doesn't have any letters, nor does the 0 for operator.TikiSoo wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 9:11 amHaha, we had a party line, it's all my Mom could afford. I feel SO SORRY for the people we shared with for my teenage years! Teens talk about nothing for HOURS!
Never noticed no Q.
Since I live in our family home, my phone number is GR9-XXXX for "Granite". They were just random words in alphabetic order. There is no "granite" in our City.