WOOD
TELEPHONE SECTION
The phones pictured
in this section are those that mount on or in the wall, and are for the
most part manufactured
from wood. My collection does not include a great number of
wood wall sets.
According to the previous owner, this basic common single box phone, a
Canadian N317
(same as the W.E. 1317) was factory customized to be a Toll Board. The
board
interconnected to a phone booth for public use and one or two other
extensions. The
owner or operator of the phone could connect other users with the main
line of the phone
and then keep track of the length of the call using the timer attached
to the front of
the phone. The box on the top of the phone was from where the wires ran
to the booth and
other locations.
This is a Holtzer
Cabot
wall set designed to fit into a circular hole in the wall.
The
cast
iron body seen in the left photo is about 3" deep. I have
mounted
the set in a piece of oak that has a box attached to the back for
supporting
the body. This was a rare find. The dialing
mechanism was
invented/made
by Ness, originally a Canadian company. The receiver and cord
are
unique H/C items.
| This
is my new Northern Electric switchboard, called an N1317A.
This
model
was in use into the seventies in Canada, but no one is quite sure when
it was first used, but it must have been in the late teens and early
twenties.
This one is complete, wiring and all, and a couple of the circuits have
been tested. This board was equipped to handle local calls,
but
one
or more of the jacks could also connect to another town for toll
calls.
You can see the size of it compared with the W.E. fiddleback to the
right. |
 |
 |
This
is a small, common battery W.E. fiddleback. According to the
dealer
from whom I acquired it, the advertising face plate and the glass
mouthpiece
were on it when he bought it and he believes that the phone was removed
from its original location in this condition. For demo
purposes,
I intend to make it one of the extensions that can be called from the
board
next to it and described above. The sign above is one of my
latest
acquisitions, a small Western Union sign that may have been used in
outdoor
locations. |
| This
is a Holtzer Cabot wall set with original receiver and cord.
This
phone uses the same dial mechanism as seen above and on the HC
candlestick
in that section of the website. The dialing mechanism was
manufactured
by Ness American or perhaps Ness of Canada. This set also
features
an original bullet glass mouthpiece. This type of phone was
part
of an internal dial intercom system as the dial was not the type that
would
function with the ordinary rotary dialing equipment. |
 |
 |
This
is a hotel switchboard mfg'd by Western Electric circa 1910.
It's
known as the 1012 board. It accommodates ten rooms (one set
of
bells
per room). The clerk could call any room, receive a call from
any
room, and connect one room to another. It's not clear in the
literature
whether this board was for internal use only. The wood has
been
refinished
and all the metal parts have been renickeled. The mouthpiece
is
an
original porcelain piece which could be boiled to eliminate
germs.
The board could be functional as it is totally complete. |

Here's
a nice view out an upstairs window. There is a Chicago tandem
on
the left,
a W.E.
301 on the right with a small intercom/Samson unit next to it, and a
W.E.
candlestick lamp in the center.
The
phone
on the left is a Chicago tandem. It is one of my favorite
wood
items.
The phone in
the
middle is a Western Electric Type 301 with a coin collector.
This
too is a favorite. The
phone
on the right is a North toploader, a very unique wall set.
The
batteries
were stored
in a
top rather than bottom compartment.
|
This
is commonly known as a Strowger Wall Set. They are very nice
items
and are not difficult to find. This one is in especially nice
condition
in all respects. Note the old, original glass
mouthpiece.
Glass
could be sterilized easily so many people installed them on their
phones
to reduce the chances of contracting TB. Many folks carried
one
of
these mouthpieces with them to use on phones when away from
home.
Some glass mouthpieces, such as the Red Cross type, actually provided a
way for a disenfectant to be added to a wick or reservoir within the
mouthpiece.
The framed item just above the phone is a Long Distance tobacco label. |
| This
is Western Electric Type 21 set. This phone appears on Page
52 of
Rick Mountjoy's "One Hundred Years of Bell Telephones."
Actually,
it a later model, circa 1907, which was converted from a Type 21 set by
the addition of a newer transmitter. This set is walnut with
a
set
of walnut bells or gongs. Rick calls this a Type 240 set with
a
Type
250 "New Style Bracket Set Transmiter." |
|
 |
This wallset
is known
as a Western Electric Type 21 conversion. This phone was
converted
from the top box on the phone pictured above or below this photo when
it
was no longer necessary to store batteries inside the phone.
The
above and below phones are pre-1900 and were probably converted around
the turn of the century. There are a number of different
types of
conversions. Most of this model phone were made of Walnut.
The small
round 4"
porcelain Bell System sign below is very rare and was probably used by
the phone company to mark or identify company property or equipment.
|
| This
phone is very much like the one just above but it's an earlier model
made
in New York for the New England Bell Telephone Company. It
differs
in a couple of ways from the one above in that it has features that the
other doesn't have. One of them is a special lightning
arrestor
mounted
inside on the bell coil. The arrestor contacts are held open
by a
wax ball that would in the case of a lighting strike, melt, allowing
the
switch contacts to close thus protecting the phone and the user from
the
effects of the lightning. The switchhook and the manner in
which
the door latches are also different. The circular Bell logo
on
the
right is an old decal. The lamp is one of those made by the
phone
company, intended no doubt as a gift for a retiring employee.
Seldom
does one see a dial candlestick used for this purpose. |
 |
|
This
is a small Kellogg fiddleback that has been converted to dial
service.
I found the phone without the dial but was later able to secure part of
the original mount and then have John Infurna make the missing part
that
attaches the dial assembly to the shelf. I added the all
original
coin collector to the rear of this phone. The mouthpiece is
an
old,
original Kellogg ivory model. The receiver is a brown
Kellogg.
The small wood box just to the left of the transmitter is a Kellogg,
two-line
switch. The Public Telephone porcelain magnet is new and
simply
sticks
to the front of the coin collector. |

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