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-
- ==Phrack Inc==
-
- Volume Three, Issue 30, File #10 of 12
-
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
- === ===
- === Western Union ===
- === Telex, TWX, and Time Service ===
- === ===
- === by Phone Phanatic ===
- === ===
- === September 17, 1989 ===
- === ===
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- "Until a few years ago -- maybe ten -- it was very common to
- see TWX and Telex machines in almost every business place."
-
- There were only minor differences between Telex and TWX. The biggest
- difference was that the former was always run by Western Union, while the
- latter was run by the Bell System for a number of years. TWX literally meant
- "(T)ype(W)riter e(x)change," and it was Bell's answer to competition from
- Western Union. There were "three row" and "four row" machines, meaning the
- number of keys on the keyboard and how they were laid out. The "three row"
- machines were simply part of the regular phone network; that is, they could
- dial out and talk to another TWX also connected on regular phone lines.
-
- Eventually these were phased out in favor of "newer and more improved" machines
- with additional keys, as well as a paper tape reader attachment which allowed
- sending the same message repeatedly to many different machines. These "four
- row" machines were not on the regular phone network, but were assigned their
- own area codes (410-510-610-710-810-910) where they still remain today. The
- only way a four row machine could call a three row machine or vice-versa was
- through a gateway of sorts which translated some of the character set unique to
- each machine.
-
- Western Union's network was called Telex and in addition to being able to
- contact (by dial up) other similar machines, Telex could connect with TWX (and
- vice-versa) as well as all the Western Union public offices around the country.
- Until the late 1950's or early 1960's, every small town in America had a
- Western Union office. Big cities like Chicago had perhaps a dozen of them, and
- they used messengers to hand deliver telegrams around town. Telegrams could be
- placed in person at any public office, or could be called in to the nearest
- public office.
-
- By arrangement with most telcos, the Western Union office in town nearly always
- had the phone number 4321, later supplemented in automated exchanges with some
- prefix XXX-4321. Telegrams could be charged to your home phone bill (this is
- still the case in some communities) and from a coin phone, one did not ask for
- 4321, but rather, called the operator and asked for Western Union. This was
- necessary since once the telegram had been given verbally to the wire clerk,
- s/he in turn had to flash the hook and get your operator back on the line to
- tell them "collect five dollars and twenty cents" or whatever the cost was.
- Telegrams, like phone calls, could be sent collect or billed third party. If
- you had an account with Western Union, i.e. a Telex machine in your office, you
- could charge the calls there, but most likely you would simply send the
- telegram from there in the first place.
-
- Sometime in the early 1960's, Western Union filed suit against AT&T asking that
- they turn over their TWX business to them. They cited an earlier court ruling,
- circa 1950's, which said AT&T was prohibited from acquiring any more telephone
- operating companies except under certain conditions. The Supreme Court agreed
- with Western Union that "spoken messages" were the domain of Ma Bell, but
- "written messages" were the domain of Western Union. So Bell was required to
- divest itself of the TWX network, and Western Union has operated it since,
- although a few years ago they began phasing out the phrase "TWX" in favor of
- "Telex II"; their original device being "Telex I" of course. TWX still uses
- ten digit dialing with 610 (Canada) or 710/910 (USA) being the leading three
- digits. Apparently 410-510 have been abandoned; or at least they are used very
- little, and Bellcore has assigned 510 to the San Francisco area starting in a
- year or so. 410 still has some funny things on it, like the Western Union
- "Infomaster," which is a computer that functions like a gateway between Telex,
- TWX, EasyLink and some other stuff.
-
- Today, the Western Union network is but a skeleton of its former self. Now
- most of their messages are handled on dial up terminals connected to the public
- phone network. It has been estimated the TWX/Telex business is about fifty
- percent of what it was a decade ago, if that much.
-
- Then there was the Time Service, a neat thing which Western Union offered for
- over seventy years, until it was discontinued in the middle 1960's. The Time
- Service provided an important function in the days before alternating current
- was commonly available. For example, Chicago didn't have AC electricity until
- about 1945. Prior to that we used DC, or direct current.
-
- Well, to run an electric clock, you need 60 cycles AC current for obvious
- reasons, so prior to the conversion from DC power to AC power, electric wall
- clocks such as you see in every office were unheard of. How were people to
- tell the time of day accurately? Enter the Western Union clock.
-
- The Western Union, or "telegraph clock" was a spring driven wind up clock, but
- with a difference. The clocks were "perpetually self-winding," manufactured by
- the Self-Winding Clock Company of New York City. They had large batteries
- inside them, known as "telephone cells" which had a life of about ten years
- each. A mechanical contrivance in the clock would rotate as the clock spring
- unwound, and once each hour would cause two metal clips to contact for about
- ten seconds, which would pass juice to the little motor in the clock which in
- turn re-wound the main spring. The principle was the same as the battery
- operated clocks we see today. The battery does not actually run the clock --
- direct current can't do that -- but it does power the tiny motor which re-winds
- the spring which actually drives the clock.
-
- The Western Union clocks came in various sizes and shapes, ranging from the
- smallest dials which were nine inches in diameter to the largest which were
- about eighteen inches in diameter. Some had sweep second hands; others did
- not. Some had a little red light bulb on the front which would flash. The
- typical model was about sixteen inches, and was found in offices, schools,
- transportation depots, radio station offices, and of course in the telegraph
- office itself.
-
- The one thing all the clocks had in common was their brown metal case and
- cream-colored face, with the insignia "Western Union" and their corporate logo
- in those days which was a bolt of electricity, sort of like a letter "Z" laying
- on its side. And in somewhat smaller print below, the words "Naval Observatory
- Time."
-
- The local clocks in an office or school or wherever were calibrated by a
- "master clock" (actually a sub-master) on the premises. Once an hour on the
- hour, the (sub) master clock would drop a metal contact for just a half second,
- and send about nine volts DC up the line to all the local clocks. They in turn
- had a "tolerance" of about two minutes on both sides of the hour so that the
- current coming to them would yank the minute hand exactly upright onto the
- twelve from either direction if the clock was fast or slow.
-
- The sub-master clocks in each building were in turn serviced by the master
- clock in town; usually this was the one in the telegraph office. Every hour on
- the half hour, the master clock in the telegraph office would throw current to
- the sub-masters, yanking them into synch as required. And as for the telegraph
- offices themselves, they were serviced twice a day by -- you guessed it -- the
- Naval Observatory Master clock in Our Nation's Capitol, by the same routine.
- Someone there would press half a dozen buttons at the same time, using all
- available fingers; current would flow to every telegraph office and synch all
- the master clocks in every community. Western Union charged fifty cents per
- month for the service, and tossed the clock in for free! Oh yes, there was an
- installation charge of about two dollars when you first had service (i.e. a
- clock) installed.
-
- The clocks were installed and maintained by the "clockman," a technician from
- Western Union who spent his day going around hanging new clocks, taking them
- out of service, changing batteries every few years for each clock, etc.
-
- What a panic it was for them when "war time" (what we now call Daylight Savings
- Time) came around each year! Wally, the guy who serviced all the clocks in
- downtown Chicago had to start on *Thursday* before the Sunday official
- changeover just to finish them all by *Tuesday* following. He would literally
- rush in an office, use his screwdriver to open the case, twirl the hour hand
- around one hour forward in the spring, (or eleven hours *forward* in the fall
- since the hands could not be moved backward beyond the twelve going
- counterclockwise), slam the case back on, screw it in, and move down the hall
- to the next clock and repeat the process. He could finish several dozen clocks
- per day, and usually the office assigned him a helper twice a year for these
- events.
-
- He said they never bothered to line the minute hand up just right, because it
- would have taken too long, and ".....anyway, as long as we got it within a
- minute or so, it would synch itself the next time the master clock sent a
- signal..." Working fast, it took a minute to a minute and a half to open the
- case, twirl the minute hand, put the case back on, "stop and b.s. with the
- receptionist for a couple seconds" and move along.
-
- The master clock sent its signal over regular telco phone lines. Usually it
- would terminate in the main office of whatever place it was, and the (sub)
- master there would take over at that point.
-
- Wally said it was very important to do a professional job of hanging the clock
- to begin with. It had to be level, and the pendulum had to be just right,
- otherwise the clock would gain or lose more time than could be accommodated in
- the hourly synching process. He said it was a very rare clock that actually
- was out by even a minute once an hour, let alone the two minutes of tolerance
- built into the gear works.
-
- "...Sometimes I would come to work on Monday morning, and find out
- in the office that the clock line had gone open Friday evening. So
- nobody all weekend got a signal. Usually I would go down a manhole
- and find it open someplace where one of the Bell guys messed it up,
- or took it off and never put it back on. To find out where it was
- open, someone in the office would 'ring out' the line; I'd go around
- downtown following the loop as we had it laid out, and keep listening
- on my headset for it. When I found the break or the open, I would
- tie it down again and the office would release the line; but then I
- had to go to all the clocks *before* that point and restart them,
- since the constant current from the office during the search had
- usually caused them to stop."
-
- But he said, time and again, the clocks were usually so well mounted and hung
- that "...it was rare we would find one so far out of synch that we had to
- adjust it manually. Usually the first signal to make it through once I
- repaired the circuit would yank everyone in town to make up for whatever they
- lost or gained over the weekend..."
-
- In 1965, Western Union decided to discontinue the Time Service. In a nostalgic
- letter to subscribers, they announced their decision to suspend operations at
- the end of the current month, but said "for old time's sake" anyone who had a
- clock was welcome to keep it and continue using it; there just would not be any
- setting signals from the master clocks any longer.
-
- Within a day or two of the official announcement, every Western Union clock in
- the Chicago area headquarters building was gone. The executives snatched them
- off the wall, and took them home for the day when they would have historical
- value. All the clocks in the telegraph offices disappeared about the same
- time, to be replaced with standard office-style electric wall clocks.
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