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Phones Collection

Phones have come a long way since their inception, revolutionizing the way we communicate

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Phones Collection: Picture No. 11772293
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Phones Collection: Advert promoting the Post Office Telephone Service. Date: 1932
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Phones Collection: Queen Elizabeth On The Phone
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Phones Collection: Pay phone and shop windows on Fifth Avenue at night, Manhattan, New York City
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Phones Collection: Example of a woman dialling 999
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Phones Collection: A long line of telephone switchboards
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Phones Collection: 1934 G. P. O telephone advertisement
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Phones Collection: New Site For Clay-Liston Fight
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Phones Collection: Woman on the telephone, postcard
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Phones Collection: A Sports Reporter At Work
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Phones Collection: Historic motoring emergency telephone box, a Box 573, Garrowby, East Yorkshire, England, march
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Phones Collection: Desert02
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Phones Collection: Desert02
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Phones Collection: Desert02
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Phones Collection: Desert02
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Phones Collection: Desert02
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Phones Collection: Ive Heard from the Man In The Moon, c.1770-1959 (print)
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Phones Collection: Daddy Come Home, 1913 (print)
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Phones Collection: Youve Got To See Mamma Evry Night (or you cant see Mamma at all), 1923 (print)
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Phones Collection: American Mythology, 1893 (photogravure)
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Phones Collection: Who Are You With To-Night?, c.1770-1959 (print)
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Phones Collection: Oh Say! Can I See You To-Night, c.1770-1959 (print)
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Phones Collection: The Great Lover, c.1770-1959 (print)
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Phones Collection: Hang out the front door key, c.1770-1959 (print)
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Phones Collection: Experiment of telephony by Francois Sudre on the Champ de Mars, Paris, 1829 (engraving)
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Phones Collection: Phones
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Phones Collection: Early telephones, Verity Electrical Supplies
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Phones Collection: Subway station and phone booths, Manhattan, New York City, USA
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Phones Collection: UK, England, London, Ludgate Hill, St. Pauls Cathedral, Red Telephone Box
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Phones Collection: Unlikely #87
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Phones Collection: Image of a woman mid-phone conversation, taken from a lifestyle article about living alone
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Phones Collection: The Pocket Marconigraph
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Phones Collection: Telephone Exchange, Paris, 1904 (print)
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Phones Collection: Clothes Sales with Family Chat!
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Phones Collection: Bust of Philipp Reis, born 7 January 1834, German physicist and inventor of the telephone
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Phones Collection: Bust of Philipp Reis, born 7 January 1834, German physicist and inventor of the telephone
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Phones Collection: Berlin telephone exchange, office IX, telephone exchange with manual operation
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Phones Collection: Hello, Summer!
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Phones Collection: Alexander Graham Bell (engraving)
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Phones Collection: Barton Academy, Mobile, Alabama (engraving)
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Phones Collection: Edison phonograph (b / w photo)
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Phones Collection: In the City Park, Mobile, 'Ebony nurse-maids flirt with their lovers'(engraving)
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Phones Collection: Bank of Mobile and Odd Fellows Hall, Mobile, Alabama (engraving)
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Phones Collection: Trinity Church, Mobile, Alabama (engraving)
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Phones Collection: The Custom-House, Mobile, Alabama (engraving)
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Phones Collection: Christ Church, Mobile, Alabama (engraving)
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Phones Collection: The Marine and City Hospitals, Mobile, Alabama (engraving)
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Phones Collection: The Telephone Exchange System (engraving)


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Phones have come a long way since their inception, revolutionizing the way we communicate. From the iconic pay phone booths on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan to Queen Elizabeth herself chatting away on her mobile device, they have become an integral part of our daily lives. Whether it's dialing 999 for emergencies or using historic motoring emergency telephone boxes like Box 573 in Garrowby, East Yorkshire, they have been there to connect us when we need it most. The evolution of technology is evident with images showcasing a long line of telephone switchboards and a sports reporter utilizing his phone to report live from the field. Even back in 1954, women were depicted mid-phone conversation in lifestyle articles about living alone, highlighting the independence that phones offered. Advertisements promoting the Post Office Telephone Service from as early as 1932 show how communication has always been valued and improved upon throughout history. So whether you're making important calls or simply catching up with loved ones, phones continue to play an essential role in connecting people across time and space.