Whilst the touch phone is still in use today, it has been very much superseded by the cordless model.
I do not use the landline system anymore, instead utilising the mobile device network for our communication needs.
In the early days the automated telephone system was not available for every home to have a telephone, so public phone boxes were strategically placed around the suburbs. Unfortunately in early 1950, the suburb of Lalor was very new and the only public phone in our area of the suburb was at the railway station, some 560 mt. from our house. The streets were unmade and when wet, were a challenge to navigate, especially for my mother when pushing a pram with a child in it. The local families actually had a large wooden box at the railway station where people would leave their gumboots whilst away on the train. Most people left their phone calls until they were in the vicinity of the station. The automated telephone installation did eventually come in late 1952, but the eastern end of our street was one of the last areas to be connected. We were not connected for some time, instead relying on nearby family members in an emergency.
My second experience with the telephone was at my Grandparents property near Woomelang in the Mallee. This line was known as the ‘party’ line, with two wires strung on insulators between mallee tree trunks.
I often wonder if our grandparents could see what is available in communication equipment today, what would they think?
Barry O’Connor.
July 2020.