Buffalo Mayor Louis P. Fuhrmann, with Chamber of Commerce president H.A. Meldrum beside him, made the first call from the new building. He telephoned Lt. Gov. Fitzgerald in Denver, Colorado. The connection was established through Detroit, Chicago, and Omaha. After this demonstration of technical sophistication concluded, Mr. Meldrum asked and received permission to speak with his sister in Denver.
On August 1, 1918, Frontier, then known as Federal Telephone and Telegraph Company, was sold to New York Telephone, once again creating a telephone monopoly in Buffalo. At that time there were 66,000 telephones installed in Buffalo. By 1925, there were 100,000 telephones in Buffalo; by 1947, there were 200,000. The primary location of the machinery to run the system was the Telephone Building, where in 1948 it was estimated that there were 909 miles of switchboard cable, 1200 of other wire, and 2,000,000 pounds of iron, copper, lead and other metals. The predominant sound on upper floors was a continuous clicking of switches and circuits. |