Hi, Folks, Here in Maryland, I recall two exchanges from the 1950s. One was GArden 4; the other was POplar 2. I heard (unofficially) that it was because many people had their own gardens, and that there were lots of poplar trees around! This may be an urban legend, but to an 8-year-old having a telephone for the first time, it made sense to me!! I STILL remember the number: GArden 4-7972. Area codes, however, are a TOTALLY different beast!! Mike Marceau in Taneytown, Maryland "If you finish listening before I finish talking, please feel free tp leave; I won't mind at all." Anonymous - from the keynote speaker at a convention I recently attended On Thu, 25 Feb 1999, Daniel H. Weiskotten wrote: > Since the topic has been brought up - just how did the first three digits > of phone numbers (not the area code) get started or assigned? Is it a > regional development from the early local company number assignments (such > as "Operator ... W-7 please")? when I was a kid (not too long ago!) we had > Oldfield 5 which translated on the dial as 655, but no one ever seemed to > know where the "Oldfield" came from - which came first - the numbers or the > letters? Were they devised on some logical plan like the compass system > used on the Rural Indexes? Was it a local thing devised by the local > companies and then modified when they were gobbled up by Ma Bell??? > > Just curious. > > Dan W. >