Did you know that Steve
McQueen’s first screen performance was in the 1955 film, Family Affair, about the benefits of extension phones? Or that
before George Wendt found fame as Norm on Cheers,
he starred in a silent film called You Always Hurt the One You Love, about workplace safety? These are just a few
of the tidbits I discovered this summer, when I took a break from my own projects
to immerse myself in the treasures that are the AT&T Archives.
Starting in the late 1920s,
AT&T produced hundreds of films on everything from telephone etiquette to the
newest innovations from Bell Labs, the company’s research and development arm. Some
of the films were shown to the public in venues such as movie theaters. Others
were made to inform employees. Today, many are available for
viewing online. I was hired to research the back stories of some of them and
write scripts for “Bonus” introductions to be filmed at the AT&T Archives and History Center in Warren, New Jersey. The online host, George Kupczak, is the
wizard who runs the archives, keeping track of more than one million documents,
another million photographs, and 15,000 artifacts from the Bell System’s
history.
During my three months at
AT&T, I wrote about telephone service in early 20th-century
Cuba, the cultural impact of party lines, the operators at World War II
military telephone centers, and the introduction of modular plugs and jacks for telephones in the 1970s. I learned a great deal about telephone cables,
specifically those laid from Florida to Cuba in 1921 and 1950, across Newfoundland during World War II, and from Washington State to Ketchikan, Alaska, in the 1950s. That cable to Alaska caused all sorts of problems. There
were 1,600 miles of it, with the shortest
piece measuring about 200 miles, and it had to be transported from the
manufacturer in New Hampshire all the way to Seattle. The story of how that
happened, involving a decommissioned Liberty ship rented for $385,000, is the
focus of my Bonus script.
Indeed, I couldn’t help but
notice that this was a company that often marshaled massive resources in the
pursuit of progress. A case in point was the subject of another script I wrote,
about the DEW Line, or Distant Early
Warning Line. This chain of radar posts north of the Arctic Circle extended
some 3,000 miles from Alaska through Canada. Built by AT&T’s Western
Electric Company at the height of the Cold War, the DEW Line would give the
U.S. and Canada four to six hours warning if the Soviet Union launched a bomber
attack toward North America. Close to 5,000 Bell System employees spent months
on end in the frozen north from 1955 to 1957, building ersatz towns as well as
radar installations with help from the U.S. and Canadian militaries. The cost of
the project was estimated to be as much as $1 billion.
As someone who often writes
about more modest achievements, I was a bit awed by the scale of AT&T’s
impact on the world. After all, this is the company that invented radar, as well as the transistor, the laser, the Telstar
satellite, and so much more. It was beyond cool to be able to spend time in the
archives researching various aspects of the company’s history and reading the
letters and notebooks of those who made it happen. If you want a taste of that
history, check out the Archives videos. My Bonus introductions are still in the
editing bay, but there are plenty of others to look at right now.
1 comment:
What a great research opportunity! I think one of our dirty secrets is how much we enjoy the all the "work" we must do researching our writing! I didn't realize AT&T had done all these things--definitely a wow factor needed!
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