BELL REPLACED OPERATORS IN 1940
Thursday February 24, 1983

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Pix #1 - Photo taken in 1931 of Bell employees at
that time. They include (top row, left to right): Helen Polta, chief
operator; James Dawson, lineman and phone installer; Howard Youngston,
lineman; Lawrence Zimmerman, plant chief; Theron Greeniee, test
board chief; Mabel Bennett, operator; Clarence Mellen, commercial
manager; Vara Earl, chief operator; Nellie Yates, operator; Front
Row, left to right: Beryl Lanker, commercial deapartment cashier;
Helen Wolfelt, operator; Lauretta Hutchins, assistant commercial
cashier; Margaret "Peg" Massie, operator; Florence Boyer, supervisor;
Jestene Welker, chief operator, and Ruth Roberts of Findlay.
Pix #2 - Expansion of Fostoria's local telephone exchanged
caused the company to move from Main Street to this building at
117 E. North Street. Ohio Bell leased the entire building to house
its business office, operators and installation/repair employees.
This photo was taken on Dec. 2, 1927.
Author's Note: Last week's article about the early
years of telephone service in Fostoria and the phone models covered
history that only the "oldsters" probably knew. Today's article,
the second in the series covers the middle years to the present.
Many readers will recall when the Ohio Bell office
and exchange were in the building on East North Street, shown in
the accompanying photo. Customers paid their bills and operators
and installation and repair employees were headquartered there.
The number please women were on the second floor where the callers
were connected with their parties via hand-operated switchboards.
In later years, Ohio Bell built a new building just
east of 117 E. North St. and installed all of the equipment for
the new local dial system which went into effet in 1940. The new
building also housed the business offices for the company.
There are still a few of the number please women living
in the area who worked for Ohio Bell.
DIAL PHONES IN 1940
It was in 1940 that the manual telephone switchboards
became obsolete and all calls were dialed by the caller. The only
need for operators was for certain long distance phone calls and
other operator-assisted calls. For those types of calls, the reduced
staff of operators was located in the Findlay Bell office. Bell
tried to transfer operators to other cities whenever possible. Telephones
and services have changed tremendously through the years, but the
friendships and memories of the past remain the same.
While gathering data for this article, I spent an
evening with the Welker sisters - Bonnie and Mille - in their home
along with Vera (Earl) Stoneberger and Mabel Smith - all verteran
employees of Ohio Bell. Other employees names and events of past
years flew thick and fast during the evening.
More recently, at Mabel Smith's home on Leonard Street,
she and I went through two scrapbooks she has kept since she joined
Ohio Bell in 1929 and after her termination in 1940 when Fostoria
went "dial". She had kept scrapbooks from whenever the "old gand"
gets together. Alumni had their first reunion in 1941 and the most
recent in 1982.
Quite often at the reunions, a telephone call would
come through from Mrs. Fred (Marie) Yaryan, one of the operators
who now lives in Los Gatos, CA.
REMEMBER THESE NAMES AND FACES
The accompanying photo, representative of the group
from earlier years will help recall faces for readers as well as
for Ohio Bell folks.
The following list of Ohio Bell female employees,
taken from published news items of reunions, is the only one available.
Hopefully, there are no omissions.
Gertrude Hollenbaugh Boyd, Celia M. Youngston, Florence
Jacobs Drey, Bertha Kay Foote Kauffman, Beryl Lanker Miller, Lela
Kinney McAnaney (chief operator), Mabel Bennett Smith, Bea Mosier
Grashel, Tillie Bishop, Vera Earl Stoneberger, Helen Polta (chief
operator), Mary McElfish, Margaret "Peg" Massie, Leona Dible.
Marguerite Schaar, Ruth King Huth, Lula Hoffer, Rita
Merchiruo, Lauretta Beatty, Ethel Lawrence Mall, Alta Preble, Jerry
Ohl, Marie Yochum, Nellie Clyde Fisher, Erma Reeve, Mabel Went Manecke,
Helen Wolfelt Turner, Wanda Thompson McDonald, Gladys Richard Fleming.
Margaret Jones, Dorothy Flechtner (chief operator),
Dorothea Shondell Coil, Wanda Molnor, Lena Weber, Beaulah Kauffman
Anderson, Nellie Yates Leeson, Irene Lawrence Apple, Marie Yaryan,
Jestine Welker, Bonnie Welker (chief operator), Ruth Haddox, Grace
Duffey Boos, Marie Sauber, Pearl Ropp.
Maude Frysinger (chief operator), Emma Doty (chief
operator), Virginia Krupp Fox, Florence Boyer, Lauretta Hutchins
Smith, Edna Frankenfield, Sylvia Senn, Rose Wilhelm, Mrs. Harold
Anderson, Mrs. Roy Myers, Mrs. L.B. Stearns, Mrs. S.J. Lawless,
Mrs. Harold Stumpp, Helen Romig, Nina Nobbs Keiser, Thelma Collins
(chief operator).
Vara (Earl) Stoneberger served as operator and also
as clerk under six chief operators: Wolfelt, McAnaney, Collins,
Polta, Flechtner and Welker.
The old-timer local male employees of Ohio Bell are:
Jim Dawson, Howard Youngston, Jack Myers, Theron Greenlee, Al Bryner,
Maxwell Snyder, Robert Delp, Robert Lance, Harry Smith. They were
all involved in repair, installation and technical work.
FOUR "PIONEERS" IN FOSTORIA
Many years ago, Bell instituted the Pioneers Club,
consisting of employees who worked for the company more than 20
years. According to Ohio Bell, Robert Baxter, Milton Dunn Jr. and
Kenneth Woessner are still local employees and members of the club,
as is Bonnie Welker. She worked at the Bell Findlay office after
operators were no longer needed here, and then later moved to California
and worked for the telephone company there, returning to Fostoria
after her retirement.
Others still employeed by Ohio Bell locall in addition
to Dunn, Baxter and Woessner are: Dan Wolph, don coburn, Rick Osterwalder,
Shelby Roberts, Jim Brandt, Denny McCoy, Duane Reynolds, Jim Shriver,
Gene Preston, Jim Beeson, Ron Anderson, Chuck Wall, Sue Sponsceller,
the latter being stationed at the Phone Center on East Tiffin Street.
All the others are involed in repair, installtion, cable work and
as technicians.
SOPHISTICATION ON ITS WAY
Gathering the above names, I visited the Bell Central
Office on East North Street and was treated to a tour of the facilities
by Jim Brandt. He showed me the intricate facilities that displaced
the hand-operated equipment and operators in 1940. Fostoria was
one of the first to get the new dial system.
I learned that sometime in the next several years,
all of that equipment now used there will be obsolete. It will be
replaced with still more modern circuitry, more foolproof and so
much more compact that it will occupy about one fourth as many employees
to maintain.
I knew that the electric current to operate the telephone
system was direct current, supplied by batteries, but never visualized
what they looked like, how large they were. I had no idea of the
backup equipment necessary in case of emergency.
If disaster strikes the direct current system, a standby
fuel-operated generator is ready to provide direct current immediately
to keep the phone system working. Another system operated continually
in the central office to inject air into all cables that hold the
telephone wires to keep them dry.
In 1982, Ohio Bell spent $1.5 million and in 1983,
it projects it will spend $1.6 million on cable maintenance, repair
and installation in the Fostoria area, according to Don Fruchey.
Bell representative.
PEOPLE AND HOUSES ON CROCKER STREET
Esther Shaffer continues reminisching about the north
side of Crocker Street, starting at Poplar.
NO. 236 - Sylvester Schubert, bachelor brother of
the next neigbors, Mrs. Herbert and a retired farmer, lived there
until his death. At that time, it was a rental property. A family
named Baeder lived there as did the Albert Flechtners and their
daughter Margaret. During World War II, the Holden family was the
owners. It was then purchased by Mr. and Mrs. Odell Dunn.
NO. 238 - The George Gerlingers were the owners of
the property, their children being Dorothea, Freda and Martha. Dorothea
created quite a stir in Fostoria when she was chosen the most beautiful
gitl in Ohio and was awarded $5,000. The judges were artists and
movie scouts. She was called a perfect Italian Renaissance type.
Freda married Fred Dillery and they have been active in Masonic
and Eastern Start work. Martha chose a business career in Dayton
and was very successfull.
The Fred Herberts, retired farmers, were next purchasers.
Mr. Herbert had tuberculosis of the bone, was on crutches and died
soon after they moved there, about 1915. Their daughter Ina, and
her husband D.L. Fruth, then moved in and rented their house at
251. The Herberts sold the house some 50 years later to Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Hammer, who acquired a family during the time they were
on the street.
NO. 240 - It was known as the Hazen House. John Hazen
was killed in the fireworks factory explosion in 1904. He didn't
work there, but had been called in beacuse of his knowledge of machinery.
Mrs. Hazen the former Nettie Cramer, was a fine musician as were
her sons, John Clair and Charles. She played the piano. Charles
the cornet and Clair plated several instruments. The sons and their
mother were on the Chautauquz Circuit for several summers. Both
men saw service in France in World War I.
When Jack Wainwright started his Fostoria band, he
also started one in Bucyrus and Clair was placed in charge. Hazen
soon took over on his own and was director of instrumental music
in Bucyrus schools until his death from a heart attack at the age
of 40. Charles worked in the office of the Allen Motor Co. and moved
to Columbus with them. He played for a number of good bands during
the big band era, but he too died yound from tuberculosis of the
throat and from injuries received in his war service. Mrs. Hazen
was active in musical affairs, the Methodist Church and veterans,
including the Relief Corps. and legion auxiliary.
The house was later sold to the Rommig family then
later to Ralph Hammer.