During twentieth-century telephone systems, a party line (also multiparty line or shared service line) was an arrangement in which two or more customers were connected directly to the same local loop. Prior to World War II in the United States, party lines were the primary way residential subscribers acquired local telephone service. British users similarly benefited from the party line discount.
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Originally, in order to distinguish one line subscriber from another, operators developed different ringing cadences for the subscribers, so that if the call was for the first subscriber to the line, the ring would follow one pattern such as two short rings, if the call was for the second subscriber, the ring would sound another way, such as a short ring followed by a long one, and so on. Since all parties utilized the same line, it was possible for subscribers to listen in on other subscribers' calls. [1] Frequently ringing phones were an annoyance, so selective ringing methods were introduced in the mid-twentieth century.
Especially effective on two-party lines was the distinction between tip party and ring party. Each telephone bell, rather than being connected across tip and ring as usual, was connected from one wire to local ground. Thus only the selected station in a two party line would ring. For multiparty lines all the "tip parties" or all the "ring parties" would ring, in this semi-selective scheme. This system was also used in the United Kingdom where X and Y subscribers on an A&B wire system would be rung on B wire and earth for the X subscriber and on the A wire to earth in the case of the Y subscriber. The momentary earth condition to initiate a call by first getting dial tone would have a similar convention. This arrangement was therefore susceptible when lines were reversed or parts of the 'bridge tap' were reversed; otherwise the system did work satisfactorily in the absence of a complete pair per line or subscriber.
Later, independent systems applied multiple ringing frequencies for fully selective ringing. (The Bell System eschewed frequency selective ringing.) The ringers in party-line phones were tuned to distinguish several different ringing signals so that only the desired party's phone would actually ring. In this arrangement the only inconvenience of a party line was occasionally finding the line in use (by hearing talking) when one picked up the phone to make a call. If one of the parties used the phone heavily then the inconvenience for the others was more than occasional as depicted in the 1959 comedy film Pillow Talk.
Even for lines with selective ringing, calls to another party on the same party line, known as "reverting calls", required special equipment and procedures.[2] One such piece of equipment allowed a user to hear the conversation on the line without interrupting the conversation.
Party line usage was at one time common on railways, where numerous telephones were connected to a single pair of wires. Usually a long ring of many turns of the handle would alert the exchange that a connection was required to another destination. The problem of selective calling was also solved by a mechanical device which could selectively ring one or a group of stations.
One example of a community linked by party line is in Big Santa Anita Canyon high in the mountains above Los Angeles, near Sierra Madre, California, where 81 cabins, a group camp and a pack station all communicate by magneto-type crank phones. One ring is for the pack station, two rings for the camp and three rings means all cabins pick up.[3]