Date: Thu, 30 Jun 2005 17:23:06 +0000
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Originally, back in the middle 1950's when direct dialing of long
distance calls first became possible, the idea was to assign area codes
with the 'shortest' dialing time required to the larger cities.

Touch tone dialing was very rare. Most dialed calls were with 'rotary'
dials.  Area codes like 212, 213, 312 and 313 took very little time to
dial (while waiting for the dial to return to normal) as opposed, for
example, to 809, 908, 709, etc ...

So the 'quickest to dial' area codes were assigned to the places which
would probably receive the most direct dialed calls, i.e. New York City
got 212, Chicago got 312, Los Angeles got 213, etc ... Washington, DC got
202, which is a little longer to dial than 212, but much shorter than
others.

In order of size and estimated amount of telephone traffic, the numbers
got larger:  San Francisco got 415, which is sort of in the middle, and
Miami got 305, etc.  At the other end of the spectrum came places like
Hawaii (it only got statehood as of 1959) with 808,  Puerto Rico
with 809, Newfoundland with 709, etc.

The original (and still in use until about 1993) plan is that area codes
have a certain construction to the numbers:

The first digit will be 2 through 9.
The second digit will always be 0 or 1.
The third digit will be 1 through 9.

Three digit numbers with two zeros will be special codes, ie. 700, 800 or
900.  Three digit numbers with two ones are for special local codes,
i.e. 411 for local directory assistance, 611 for repairs, etc.

Three digit codes ending in '10', i.e. 410, 510, 610, 710, 810, 910 were
'area codes' for the AT&T (and later on Western Union) TWX network. This
rule has been mostly abolished, however 610 is still Canadian TWX, and
910 is still used by Western Union TWX. Gradually the '10' codes are
being converted to regular area codes.

We are running out of possible combinations of numbers using the above
rules, and in 1995 southern Alabama will split off area code 205 and
become 334.

I hope this gives you a basic  idea. There were other rules at one time
such as not having an area code with zero in the second digit in the
same state as a code with one in the second digit, etc .. but after the
initial assignment of numbers back almost forty years ago, some of
those rules were dropped when it became apparent they were not flexible
enough.  One rule that still applies is that no area code crosses a US
state line, although in Canada some provinces and/or territories share
codes.


Patrick Townson
TELECOM Digest Moderator

--
Patrick Townson
  patrick@chinet.chi.il.us / ptownson@eecs.nwu.edu / US Mail: 60690-1570
  FIDO: 115/743 / AT&T Mail: 529-6378 (!ptownson) /  MCI Mail: 222-4956
