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- From: Mark J. Cuccia <mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu>
-
- As we now begin the month of October 1997, it was sometime during
- October fifty years ago (in 1947), that the original area code format
- was 'finalized' by AT&T. Thus, the North American Numbering Plan was
- born.
-
- There _were_ two preliminary plans of assigning area codes. There was
- a plan indicated as a map of the US in 1945 in issues of both {Bell
- Laboratories Record} and {Bell System Technical Journal} magazines,
- in articles on future automated toll dialing and switching - first to
- be dialed by operators and later by customers. The 1945 map indicated
- the (continental) US only, and indicated some 60 individual regions.
- No codes were shown in the regions in the map -- only the possible
- boundaries. Canada wasn't even indicated on the 1945 map in the
- Bell magazine articles, although one of the articles did indicate
- 7-digit (2L-5N) dialing across NPA boundaries with 'protected' central
- office digits where a metro area straddled an NPA boundary, and an
- example cited in the article indicated that Windsor ON (Canada),
- across the river from Detroit MI (USA) could be such a 'protected'
- 7-digit (2L-5N) dialing situation.
-
- Another proposal was from 1946/47 would have all of the area codes in
- a particular state be from a range of consecutive codes:
- i.e. New York state would have used area codes 212, 213, 214, 215.
-
- However, at some point in 1947, Bell Labs and AT&T decided to change
- that plan, and instead issued the 'final' plan which has been built-on
- for the past half-century. I only know that this final plan was issued
- in October 1947, but I don't know which particular date in October
- that a possible memo was released by AT&T regarding the nationwide
- US/Canada numbering plan.
-
- I had posted two articles to TELECOM Digest in 1996 on the preliminary
- but never adopted area code plans. In April 1996 I posted a brief
- article on the 1946/47 plan where a state with multiple NPA codes
- would have had all of its codes from a range of consecutive codes.
- And then in mid-December 1996, I posted a longer article on the
- development of Operator Toll Dialing and its extension into customer
- DDD (Direct Distance Dialing), and included a list of the 60 possible
- regions (states, groups-of-states, portions of states) from the 1945
- map of possible future area codes.
-
- As for the 'final' plan issued in October 1947, here are the charts
- showing the assignments. Linc Madison's website also has a map of the
- US/Canada showing the 1947 assignments:
- http://www.best.com/~eureka/telecom/map_1947.html
-
- N0X Form (States/Provinces with only ONE code assigned)
- (40 codes assigned)
-
- 201 NJ 301 MD 401 RI 501 AR 601 MS 701 ND 801 UT 901 TN
- 202 DC 302 DE 402 NE 502 KY 602 AZ 702 NV 802 VT 902 mrtm.prv.
- 203 CT 303 CO 403 AB 503 OR 603 NH 703 VA 803 SC
- 204 MB 304 WV 404 GA 504 LA 604 BC 704 NC
- 205 AL 305 FL 405 OK 505 NM 605 SD
- 206 WA 306 SK 406 MT
- 207 ME 307 WY
- 208 ID
-
-
- N1N Form (States/Provinces with several codes assigned)
- (46 codes assigned)
-
- 212 NY 312 IL 412 PA 512 TX 612 MN 712 IA 812 IN
- 213 CA 313 MI 413 MA 513 OH 613 ON 713 TX 913 KS
- 214 TX 314 MO 414 WI 514 PQ 614 OH 814 PA 914 NY
- 215 PA 315 NY 415 CA 515 IA 715 WI 815 IL 915 TX
- 216 OH 316 KS 416 ON 616 MI 716 NY 816 MO 916 CA
- 217 IL 317 IN 517 MI 617 MA 717 PA
- 218 MN 418 PQ 518 NY 618 IL
- 319 IA 419 OH
-
-
- Note that in 1947, there were _no_ area codes assigned from the N09,
- N00, N10, nor N11 ranges. The N11 range is still unavailable for NPA
- assignments, since the eight N11 codes are reserved or used for local
- 3-digit service codes. The N09 range of area codes were first assigned
- in 1957. The N10 range of area codes were assigned to automated/dial
- TWX (Teletypewriter) service beginning in 1962, and continuing through
- circa 1982. Although AT&T turned (US) TWX service over to WUTCO in the
- early 1970's, it wasn't until the early 1980's when WUTCO began to
- switch and route (US) TWX on its _own_ network instead of over the
- Bell-System's DDD Telephone Network. And although TWX still exists
- (WUTCO transferred it back to AT&T circa 1990/91), it is handled via
- a separate network, not 'directly' associated with the AT&T regular
- telephone long-distance network, and still uses numbers of the N10
- form. Therefore, beginning around 1991, the N10 format as area codes
- were assigned for regular (POTS) telephone services.
-
- The N00 format was first assigned for SACs (Special Area Codes) around
- the mid-1960's, with 800 being the first N00, used for InWATS (Inward
- Wide-Area Telephone Service), aka "Toll-Free" called-party pays.
-
- Note that there were 86 codes assigned to the (at that time) 48 states
- of the US, including Washington (DC), as well as the ten provinces of
- Canada.
-
- Alaska and Hawaii weren't even states of the US at that time, nor were
- they even indicated as even being (or intended to be) a part of the
- US/Canada area code format. Canada's two northern territories, Yukon
- and the Northwest Territories, weren't indicated as being a part of
- the area code format, neither.
-
- And while Mexico had been 'pseudo' NANP at one time (access to Mexico
- City from the US was dialable 'as-if' it really were part of the NANP
- switching/routing network) ... and for some time, certain towns along
- the extreme northwestern border of Mexico were numbered and dialed
- _and_ switched/routed as a part of the NANP/DDD network ... Mexico
- was _not_ shown in 1947 to be intended as part of the NANP.
-
- None of the Caribbean was indicated to be a part of the NANP in 1947.
- Area Code 809 was first reserved/assigned to the Caribbean/Bermuda
- area in 1958. Customer dialing between the Caribbean and the US/Canada
- began to be introduced in the mid-to-late-1960's, and continuing
- through the 1970's and 80's.
-
- Newfoundland wasn't yet politically part of Canada in October 1947,
- but it does seem possible that the original NPA 902 (which at that
- time also served New Brunswick, in addition to Nova Scotia and Prince
- Edward Island) also served Newfoundland/Labrador. In the mid-1950's,
- NB and NF/LB split from 902 (which was retained for NS/PEI), into
- their own 506; and then in 1962, NF/LB split off from 506 (which was
- retained for NB), into its own 709.
-
- Also note the original intent was that N0X format codes (N01 through
- N08) were assigned to states/provinces which needed only one area code,
- and that N1N format codes (N12 through N19) were assigned to states
- and provinces which needed two or more area codes. That original
- assignment plan was abandoned in the early 1950's, when assignments of
- new area codes were beginning to increase.
-
- And, note that short 'dial-pull' (lower numerical) area codes were
- assigned to the more populated areas, due to the number of dialpulse
- (rotary dial) CPE and switching equipment in existance in 1947. Such
- shorter dial-pull area codes have fewer dial-pulses, and had been
- desirable for assignment to such populated areas which would have more
- incoming traffic than less populated areas.
-
- New York City with 212
- Los Angeles with 213
- Dallas with 214
- Philadelphia with 215
- Chicago with 312
- Detroit with 313
- St.Louis with 314
- Pittsburgh with 412
- etc.
-
- As for the 'single-NPA' states, they had N0X format codes. And even
- though the middle-digit '0' is longer to dial with ten dialpulses,
- the N0X area codes were assigned such that populated areas had
- shorter-pull, fewer-dialpulse digits for the first and third digits
- (even though the middle-digit '0' has ten total dialpulses):
-
- 201 for New Jersey
- 202 for DC
- 203 for Connecticut
- 301 for Maryland
- 302 for Delaware
- 401 for Rhode Island
-
- These are all locations in the northeast or mid-Atlantic area, with
- rather large metro areas, suburbs, etc., and thus a larger incoming
- traffic volume. Note that rural Idaho has 208, a longer-pull code. Also
- note the large number of codes which were unassigned in 1947, which are
- from the longer dial-pull ranges.
-
- While the area code format was 'finalized' in October 1947, customer
- (and even operator) use of area-codes for long-distance dialing was
- _QUITE_ limited. The area code format was a planning for the future,
- so that every telephone line in the US and Canada would have its own
- unique and distinct telephone number, for easy dialing and routing,
- first by operators, and later by customers, at later dates, as new
- automated toll switching (and ticketing) equipment was placed into
- service, throughout the US/Canada telephone network.
-
- Over the past fifty years, the NANP has had more codes assigned. First
- there were many codes assigned throughout the 1950's and early 1960's,
- due to the postwar economic and suburban 'boom', as well as the
- introduction of automated customer long-distance dialing (DDD) in
- addition to conversions of many manual local exchanges into dial
- central offices. More customers and lines means more central office
- codes. And as more central office codes are assigned, eventually new
- area codes need to be created, usually by a split. Sometimes, new
- area codes were created in the 1950's and early 1960's due to more
- efficient trunking requirements as customer DDD was being introduced.
-
- In the early 1960's, various conservation plans were being developed
- to allow N0X/N1X format codes for local central office codes (to be
- needed in some large populated areas, sometime by the mid-1970's), and
- for NNX format codes to be used as area codes, sometime by the mid-to-
- late-1990's. So-called 'interchangeable' NPA codes (NNX format) have
- indeed been introduced beginning in 1995, and have been assigned at
- rates never previously seen, surpassing the early rush of area code
- assignments in the 1950's and early 1960's.
-
- Our ten-digit numbering scheme (NXX-NXX-xxxx) in the NANP is expected
- to exhaust all available (POTS) area codes sometime in the first-half
- of the 21st Century. At first it was estimated to happen by 2050, but
- because of the current rate of assignment of NPA codes, some have
- pushed that date earlier to 2010. However, if local number portability
- amongst the competitive local telcos is properly introduced over the
- next ten years, or if central-office-code sharing takes place among
- the various competitive telcos, it may be possible to reduce the rate
- of area code assignments.
-
- There are frequently questions as to why so many countries or
- territories are included in a single numbering plan (CCITT/ITU Country
- Code +1), rather than the US, Canada, and each individual Caribbean
- island each having unique/distinct country-codes. In 1947, much of
- Canada's telephone industry was directly associated with the US
- telephone industry. AT&T did own a portion of Bell Canada; and AT&T's
- Western Electric, along with Bell Canada, owned Northern Electric
- (later known as Northern Telecom, now known as Nortel). The Caribbean
- was intended to be added in 1958. Plans to incorporate Mexico into the
- DDD network also existed since the late 1950's, and were first
- introduced around the early-to-mid-1960's. The CCITT/ITU plans for
- country-codes for each telephone country/network in the world wasn't
- really introduced until around 1964 (although there was a preliminary
- 1960 plan for country codes for Europe, North Africa, and nearby Asian
- countries).
-
- In closing, while there were 86 area codes assigned for the NANP in
- October 1947, fifty years later, on 1-October-1997, I am counting at
- least 212 active "POTS" (non-SAC) area codes in the NANP, even if only
- in permissive dialing. And the increase in new NPA codes is far from
- over or even slowing down.
-
-
- NWORLASKCG0 (BellSouth #1AESS Class-5 Local "Seabrook" 504-24x-)
- NWORLAIYCM1 (BellSouth-Mobility Hughes-GMH-2000 Cellular-MTSO NOL)
- NWORLAMA0GT (BellSouth DMS-100/200 fg-B/C/D Accss-Tandem "Main" 504+)
- NWORLAMA20T (BellSouth DMS-200 TOPS:Opr-Srvcs-Tandem "Main" 504+053+)
- NWORLAMA04T (AT&T #4ESS Class-2 Toll 060-T / 504-2T "Main" 504+)
- JCSNMSPS06T (AT&T #5ESS OSPS:Operator-Services-Tandem 601-0T 601+121)
-
- MARK_J._CUCCIA__PHONE/WRITE/WIRE/CABLE:__HOME:__(USA)__Tel:_CHestnut-1-2497
- WORK:__mcuccia@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu|4710-Wright-Road|__(+1-504-241-2497)
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