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The original North American area codes were established by the
American Telephone and Telegraph Company AT&T Corporation, an abbreviation for its former name, the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, was an American telecommunications company that provided voice, video, data, and Internet telecommunications and professional services to busi ...
(AT&T) in 1947. The assignment was in accord with the design of a uniform nationwide
telephone numbering plan A telephone numbering plan is a type of numbering scheme used in telecommunication to assign telephone numbers to subscriber telephones or other telephony endpoints. Telephone numbers are the addresses of participants in a telephone network, reach ...
that supported the goal of dialing any telephone in the nation without involvement of operators at each routing step of a
telephone call A telephone call, phone call, voice call, or simply a call, is the effective use of a connection over a telephone network between the calling party and the called party. Telephone calls are the form of human communication that was first enabl ...
from origination location to its destination. The new technology had the aim of speeding the connecting times for
long-distance calling In telecommunications, a long-distance call (U.S.) or trunk call (also known as a toll call in the UK ) is a telephone call made to a location outside a defined local calling area. Long-distance calls are typically charged a higher billing rate t ...
by eliminating the intermediary telephone operators and reducing cost. It was initially designed and implemented for
Operator Toll Dialing Operator Toll Dialing was a telephone call routing and toll-switching system for the Bell System and the independent telephone companies in the United States and Canada that paved the way for Direct Distance Dialing (DDD) by telephone service subsc ...
, in which operators at the origination point would dial the call as instructed by service subscribers, but had also the benefit of preparing the nation for
Direct Distance Dialing Direct distance dialing (DDD) is a telecommunications service in North America by which a caller may call any other subscriber outside the local calling area without operator assistance, DDD was introduced in the United States in 1951, on a tri ...
(DDD) by customers years later. The nationwide and continental application followed the demonstration of regional Operator Toll Dialing in Philadelphia during the World War II period. The new numbering plan established a uniform destination addressing and call routing system for all telephone networks in North America which had become an essential public service. The project mandated the conversion of all local telephone numbers in the system to consist of a three-character
central office code The North American Numbering Plan (NANP) is an integrated telephone numbering plan for twenty-five regions in twenty countries, primarily in North America and the Caribbean. This group is historically known as World Numbering Zone 1 and has the ...
and a four-digit station number. The initial ''"Nationwide Numbering Plan"'' of 1947 established eighty-six numbering plan areas (NPAs) that principally conformed to existing U.S. state and Canadian provincial boundaries, but fifteen states and provinces were subdivided further. Forty NPAs were mapped to entire states or provinces. Each NPA was identified by a three-digit ''area code'' used as a prefix to each local telephone number. The United States received seventy-seven area codes, and Canada nine. The initial system of numbering plan areas and area codes was expanded rapidly during the ensuing decades, and established the
North American Numbering Plan The North American Numbering Plan (NANP) is an integrated telephone numbering plan for twenty-five regions in twenty countries, primarily in North America and the Caribbean. This group is historically known as World Zone 1, World Numbering Zone ...
(NANP).


Historical context

Early in the 20th century, the American and Canadian telephone industry had established criteria and circuits for sending telephone calls across the vast number of local telephone networks on the continent to permit users to call others in many remote places in both countries. By 1930, this resulted in the establishment of the General Toll Switching Plan, a systematic approach and network with technical specifications for routing calls between two major classes of routing centers, ''Regional Centers'' and ''Primary Outlets'', as well as thousands of minor interchange points and tributaries. Calls were forwarded manually between stations by long-distance operators who used the method of
ringdown In telephony, ringdown is a method of signaling an operator in which telephone ringing current is sent over the line to operate a lamp or cause the operation of a self-locking relay known as a ''drop''. Ringdown is used in manual operation, ...
to command remote operators to accept calls on behalf of customers. This required long call set-up times with several intermediate operators involved. For initiating a call, the originating party would typically have to hang up and be called back by an operator once the call was established. The introduction of the first Western Electric No. 4 Crossbar Switching System in Philadelphia to commercial service, in August 1943, automated the process of forwarding telephone calls between regional switching points. For the Bell System this was the first test to let their long-distance operators dial calls directly to potentially distant telephones. While automatic switching decreased the connection times from as much as fifteen minutes to approximately two minutes for calls between far-away locations, each intermediate operator still had to determine special routing codes unique to their location for each call. To make a nationwide dialing network an efficient, practical reality, a uniform nationwide numbering plan was needed so that each telephone on the continent had a unique address that could be used independently from where a call originated. Such a methodology is called destination routing. With this goal, AT&T developed a new framework during the early 1940s, termed ''Operator Toll Dialing'', which was begun by the installation of a newly developed toll switching system in Philadelphia in 1943. In 1945, the American Telephone and Telegraph Company declared this effort a major post-war project for the Bell System, and proceeded with periodical communications to the general telecommunication industry via the Dial Interexchange Committee of the United States Independent Telephone Association (USITA), which disseminated the project's progress to its members via industry journals and conference contributions. The planning transitioned to implementation, when Ralph Mabbs presented the results in a talk at the Fiftieth Anniversary Meeting of the Independent Telephone Association, on October 14, 1947. A fundamental requirement for the success of automated toll dialing was a new telephone numbering plan, which became known as the ''Nationwide Numbering Plan''. This numbering plan accounted initially for seventy-seven area codes in the United States and nine in Canada. With the build-out and detailed analysis of existing technical infrastructure for toll dialing, the allocation maps needed to be modified in many states, adding numerous additional area codes during the next decade. By 1975, the numbering plan was known as the ''North American Numbering Plan'', as efforts were in progress to expand the system beyond the United States and Canada.


Numbering plan requirements

Building a nationwide network in which any telephone could be dialed directly from anywhere in the country required a systematic numbering system that was easy to understand and communicate. Existing local telephone numbers varied greatly across the country, from two or three digits in very small communities, to seven in the large cities. By the time the Bell Laboratories engineers began efforts to involve the broader industry bodies in 1945, local experiences had been studied in Pennsylvania and concepts had been developed for nationwide operator toll dialing. A crucial requirement was the conversion of all participating telephone networks to a universal numbering plan. In 1947, Ralph Mabbs recalled the specifications for this numbering plan as follows: *A distinctive telephone number for each telephone in the United States and Canada *The minimum number of digits which will provide for growth and new services *Minimum changes in customers' numbers *Minimum changes in local dialing practice *Least cost for equipment changes *Minimum reference by operators to bulletins and route guides to gain speed of service advantages *Provisions for operators to directly reach other operators at distant toll centers Based on the precedent and experience with the large-city dial systems in the nation, the designers decided to direct all telephone companies in the nation to standardize the local telephone networks to seven-digit local telephone numbers before they could participate in operator toll dialing. This required few or no changes in the nation's largest cities, but in the smaller communities the shorter telephone numbers had to be padded with additional digits in a transparent, easily understandable manner, so that extra digits were not always needed when dialing other local subscribers. By 1955, AT&T disseminated a formal publication of network documentation, specifications, and recommendations to the telephone industry, entitled '' Notes on Nationwide Dialing''.


Central office prefixes

Most automatic dial switching systems were designed since the early 1920s to provide service for up to ten-thousand subscriber lines for a complement of four digits in all telephone numbers. Each of these switching systems constituted a local
telephone exchange A telephone exchange, telephone switch, or central office is a central component of a telecommunications system in the public switched telephone network (PSTN) or in large enterprises. It facilitates the establishment of communication circuits ...
, formally known as a ''central office''. Larger communities required multiple central offices to satisfy the service needs of their population. To accommodate more than ten-thousand telephone lines in a city for automatic dial service, extra digits were added to the telephone number, preceding the line number. Such extra digits identified a specific central office in the area to which the desired destination was connected. They served as routing codes to those central offices. In places without automatic routing between central offices, subscriber dialed the operator and asked for the destination at a specific central office, typically by the exchange name that was associated with each switching system. In automatic service regions, the exchange name, or central office name, could be dialed by the initial one, two, or three letters, as letters were arranged with the numeric equivalent on each telephone dial. Central office prefixes had already been used in the cities' dial systems since the 1920s, but only the largest of cities used three digits or letters. This practice of dialing central office prefixes and users' familiarity of the system was preserved in the initial formulation of the new numbering plan, but was standardized to a format of using two letters and one digit in the prefix, resulting in the format ''2L–5N'' (two letters and five numerals) for the subscriber telephone number. For most cities, this conversion required the addition of extra digits or letters to the existing central office prefix. For example, the Atlantic City, New Jersey, telephone number ''4-5876'' was converted to ''AT4-5876'' in the 1950s. Complete replacement of existing prefixes was necessary in the case of conflicts with another office in the state. Duplication of central office names, or an identical mapping of two different names to digits, was not uncommon. In practice, the conversion of the nation to this numbering plan took decades to accomplish and was not complete before the
alphanumeric Alphanumericals or alphanumeric characters are any collection of number characters and letters in a certain language. Sometimes such characters may be mistaken one for the other. Merriam-Webster suggests that the term "alphanumeric" may often ...
number format was abandoned during the 1960s in favor of all-number calling (ANC). In addition to the central offices that provided the subscriber line for each telephone (''wire centers''), the toll routing system included special switching facilities that exclusively routed long-distance calls between end offices. Each of these toll offices also received an assignment of a unique three-digit toll office code. To reach another operator in another central office or toll office, an operator dialed only the office code of the destination.


Numbering plan areas

By 1945, initial concepts for a nationwide numbering plan anticipated a division of the continent into between fifty and seventy-five numbering plan areas (NPAs). For this size of the network, a unique two-digit code for each numbering plan area would have been sufficient. However, AT&T wanted to preserve existing dialing practices for subscribers who only dialed the local telephone number for local calls. It was therefore necessary to distinguish the NPA codes from central office codes automatically by the switching system. Previous practice also dictated that central office codes could not have the digits ''0'' and ''1'' in either of the first two positions, because no letters were mapped to those to represent
exchange names A telephone exchange name or central office name was a distinguishing and memorable name assigned to a central office. It identified the switching system to which a telephone was connected, and facilitated the connection of telephone calls betwe ...
and switching systems automatically suppressed single (spurious) loop interruptions (corresponding to digit ''1''). Dialing ''0'' was already used to reach an operator or long-distance desk. This was the opportunity for automatic distinction of NPA codes from central office prefixes, but only when ''0'' or ''1'' were used in the second position of the NPA code. Therefore, numbering plan area codes, often termed just ''area codes'', were defined to have three digits, with the middle digit being ''0'' or ''1''. Initially, area codes with the middle digit ''0'' were assigned to numbering plan areas that comprised an entire state or province, while jurisdictions with multiple numbering plan areas received area codes having ''1'' as the second digit. As network growth and routing changes could not be predicted accurately over more than a few years, this pattern was abandoned by 1956, when call routing into New Jersey was divided between two toll centers. The geographic layout of numbering plan areas across the North American continent was chosen primarily according to national, state, and territorial boundaries in the United States and Canada. While originally considered, no numbering plan area in the United States included more than a single state, but in Canada NPA 902 comprised all three provinces of
The Maritimes The Maritimes, also called the Maritime provinces, is a region of Eastern Canada consisting of three provinces: New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island. The Maritimes had a population of 1,899,324 in 2021, which makes up 5.1% of ...
in the far east. The largest states, and some states with suitable call routing infrastructure were divided into smaller entities, resulting in fifteen states and provinces that were subdivided further, creating 46 NPAs. Forty NPAs were assigned to entire states or provinces. The original configuration of the continental numbering plan assigned eighty-six area codes in October 1947, one each to every numbering plan area. The
territories of the United States Territories of the United States are sub-national administrative divisions and dependent territory, dependent territories overseen by the federal government of the United States. The American territories differ from the U.S. states and Indi ...
, which included
Alaska Alaska ( ) is a non-contiguous U.S. state on the northwest extremity of North America. Part of the Western United States region, it is one of the two non-contiguous U.S. states, alongside Hawaii. Alaska is also considered to be the north ...
, and
Hawaii Hawaii ( ; ) is an island U.S. state, state of the United States, in the Pacific Ocean about southwest of the U.S. mainland. One of the two Non-contiguous United States, non-contiguous U.S. states (along with Alaska), it is the only sta ...
, did not receive area codes at first, nor did the
territories of Canada Canada has ten provinces and three territories that are sub-national administrative divisions under the jurisdiction of the Canadian Constitution. In the 1867 Canadian Confederation, three provinces of British North America—New Brunswick, N ...
or Newfoundland and Labrador, which was a
British dominion A dominion was any of several largely self-governing countries of the British Empire, once known collectively as the ''British Commonwealth of Nations''. Progressing from colonies, their degrees of colonial self-governance increased (and, in ...
at the time.


Assignment plan

The number of central offices that could be effectively installed with a numbering plan with two letters and one digit in the central office code was expected to be approximately five hundred, because acceptable names for central offices had to be selected carefully to avoid miscommunication. States or provinces that required this many offices had to be divided into multiple smaller areas. Next to size, another important aspect was the existing infrastructure for call routing, which had developed during preceding decades independently of state or municipal boundaries. Since traffic between numbering plan areas would require one special Class-4 toll switching systems in each numbering plan area, planning the divisions avoided cutting busy toll traffic routes, so that most toll traffic remained within an area, and outgoing traffic from one area would not be tributary to toll offices in an adjacent area. However, it was recognized already in 1930 that too little granularity in the allocation pattern introduced expensive traffic back-haul requirements, conceivably resulting in congestion of the routes to the centers. Consideration of several assignment patterns resulted in the configuration that was publicized as a map in October 1947. The three-digit codes were assigned to numbering plan areas in seemingly random manner, avoiding consecutive, nearly-consecutive, or just very similar codes in neighboring numbering plan areas to avoid customer confusion, even when located in the same jurisdiction. This criterion was not always achieved, however. A geographically based enumeration method had been examined earlier, but was discarded. Thus, it would not have been possible to locate a numbering plan area geographically by its code alone. The plan divided New York into five areas, the most of any state.
Illinois Illinois ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the Midwestern United States, Midwestern United States. It borders on Lake Michigan to its northeast, the Mississippi River to its west, and the Wabash River, Wabash and Ohio River, Ohio rivers to its ...
,
Ohio Ohio ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the Midwestern United States, Midwestern region of the United States. It borders Lake Erie to the north, Pennsylvania to the east, West Virginia to the southeast, Kentucky to the southwest, Indiana to the ...
,
Pennsylvania Pennsylvania, officially the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, is a U.S. state, state spanning the Mid-Atlantic (United States), Mid-Atlantic, Northeastern United States, Northeastern, Appalachian, and Great Lakes region, Great Lakes regions o ...
, and
Texas Texas ( , ; or ) is the most populous U.S. state, state in the South Central United States, South Central region of the United States. It borders Louisiana to the east, Arkansas to the northeast, Oklahoma to the north, New Mexico to the we ...
were assigned four area codes each, and California,
Iowa Iowa ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the upper Midwestern United States, Midwestern region of the United States. It borders the Mississippi River to the east and the Missouri River and Big Sioux River to the west; Wisconsin to the northeast, Ill ...
, and
Michigan Michigan ( ) is a peninsular U.S. state, state in the Great Lakes region, Great Lakes region of the Upper Midwest, Upper Midwestern United States. It shares water and land boundaries with Minnesota to the northwest, Wisconsin to the west, ...
received three. Eight states and provinces were divided into two NPAs. The pattern of this assignment of area codes is shown in the following tabulation. This method of arrangement, which is known to have been in use at Bell Laboratories, shows clearly that area codes were assigned not entirely in random order, but by filling the table in diagonal manner from the top left corner, containing the low-numbered area codes, toward the center and lower right corner. Such a pattern suggests that the designers intended to maintain the same degree of randomness in digits for the remaining, yet unassigned codes. The first area code (201) was given to the entire state of New Jersey, the state with the greatest population density in the nation. Despite its density, the state was not subdivided until about a decade later. In fact, in the group of single-NPA states, having the middle digit ''0'', all of the low-number codes were assigned to the mid-Atlantic states around New Jersey, i.e. the District of Columbia, Connecticut, Maryland, Delaware, and Rhode Island, all states in the top of the list of states with the greatest population densities. In this table, the assignments of the nine area codes to the Canadian provinces are highlighted by a blue background.


Regional centers

The red fields are the NPAs that hosted the Regional Centers for toll-switching established in the General Toll Switching Plan of 1929: New York City (212), Los Angeles (213), Dallas (214), Chicago (312), St. Louis (314), and San Francisco (415) in the multi-NPA states, and in Denver (303) and Atlanta (404) in states with just a single area code each. Pittsburgh (412) became a Regional Center before 1952. These NPAs are clustered in the upper left corner, especially in the multiple-NPA table, but area codes 303 and 404 also fit neatly into the corresponding white positions of the N1X table, so that the Regional Center formed a closed block when ignoring the middle digit. Area codes were initially conceived as two-digit codes in c. 1945, and the middle digit (''0'' or ''1'') of the three-digits codes was added later for automatic distinction of area codes from central office codes. The assignments of these Regional Centers in the upper left corner block of the table was complemented by adjacent NPA assignments to the toll centers in Philadelphia (215), which had already been served by a No. 4 Crossbar toll switch since 1943 for regional toll service. and in Detroit (313), serving the busy toll route to Toronto.


Reserved codes

The codes of the forms ''N00'', ''N10'', and ''N11'', where N is ''2'' through ''9'', were not available for assignment as area codes at the time, but were considered as special codes, leaving a total of 136 possible combinations. The series ''N00'' was used later for non-geographic numbers, starting with intrastate toll-free 800-numbers for Inward
Wide Area Telephone Service Wide Area Telephone Service (WATS) was a flat-rate long-distance service for customer dial-type telecommunications in the service areas of the North American Numbering Plan (NANP). The service was between a given customer phone (also known as a " ...
(WATS) in 1965. ''N10'' numbers became teletypewriter exchanges,AT&T, ''Notes on the Network'' (1968), Section 9 and ''N11'' were used as short-code dialing sequences for special services, such as information and emergency services. Thus, ''201'' and ''212'' of adjacent New Jersey and New York, respectively, in the top-left corners of the tables were the first two available area codes of the new numbering plan, representing two states that were already interconnected by many local toll routes with established direct dialing by subscribers.


Implementation and expansion

For several years, area codes could be used only for
Operator Toll Dialing Operator Toll Dialing was a telephone call routing and toll-switching system for the Bell System and the independent telephone companies in the United States and Canada that paved the way for Direct Distance Dialing (DDD) by telephone service subsc ...
by long-distance operators on routes between toll offices equipped with trunk code translation equipment. This absent, operators still had to rely on route operators and office-specific trunk codes, or employ the previous method of ringdown forwarding between intermediate operators. For entering the destination codes and telephone numbers into newly designed machine-switching equipment, long-distance operators did not use the slow rotary dials, but a ten-button key set, operating at least twice as fast, which transmitted
multi-frequency In telephony, multi-frequency signaling (MF) is a type of signaling that was introduced by the Bell System after World War II. It uses a combination of audible tones for address ( telephone number) transport and supervision signaling on trunk ...
(MF) tone pulses over regular voice channels to the remote switching systems. Such channels were incapable of transmitting the direct-current pulses of a rotary dial beyond a single link. All existing toll switching offices, many still using direct-control (step-by-step) methods, had to be supplemented with components to permit MF signaling and automatic route selection. In December 1948, AT&T advanced the new long-distance technology with the cutover of new crossbar switching systems for toll-dialing in New York and Chicago, which added new technology to the No. 4 Crossbar Switching System, first installed in Philadelphia in 1943. This enabled operators to place calls directly to distant telephones without additional operators en route to some three hundred cities, and resulted in the handling of about ten percent of all Bell System long-distance calling by Operator Toll Dialing. On average, it took about two minutes for any long-distance call to be completed to its destination. As foreseen and stated in 1949, the target goal for call completion, after full implementation of the system across the nation, was one minute. As new switching systems came online and design and manufacture of other routing infrastructure proceeded, the implementation of the new numbering plan advanced and several numbering plan areas were redrawn or added during subsequent years. In 1948, northern Indiana received an extra area code ( 219) for its Chicago suburbs by dividing area code 317. In 1950, southwest Missouri, with a new toll-center in Joplin, received
area code 417 Area code 417 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for the southwestern quadrant of Missouri, including the cities of Branson, Carl Junction, Carthage, Joplin, Lebanon, Neosho, Nixa, Ozark, Springfield, and ...
, a change that provided more central offices in Kansas City. In 1951, the number of area codes grew to ninety: the State of New York gained area code 516 on Long Island, and Southern California received area code 714, to reduce the numbering plan area of Los Angeles. By 1951, a new Class-5 switching system, the No.5 Crossbar, had proven successful in
Media, Pennsylvania Media is a borough (Pennsylvania), borough in and the county seat of Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is located about west of Philadelphia. It is part of the Delaware Valley, also known as the Philadelphia metropolitan area. ...
, and
automatic message accounting Automatic message accounting (AMA) provides detailed accounting for telephone calls. When direct distance dialing (DDD) was introduced in the US, message registers no longer sufficed for dialed telephone calls. The need to record the time and pho ...
(AMA) became available for billing telephone calls. The switching system was capable of handling the dialing of as many as eleven digits by subscribers. In
Englewood, New Jersey Englewood is a city in Bergen County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. Englewood was incorporated as a city by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on March 17, 1899, from portions of Ridgefield Township and the remaining portions of Engle ...
, such a system was linked to a toll-class switch with the first commercial
transistor A transistor is a semiconductor device used to Electronic amplifier, amplify or electronic switch, switch electrical signals and electric power, power. It is one of the basic building blocks of modern electronics. It is composed of semicondu ...
circuitry that enabled the system to automatically translate area codes into toll trunk codes. On November 10, 1951, the system commenced a customer trial of
direct distance dialing Direct distance dialing (DDD) is a telecommunications service in North America by which a caller may call any other subscriber outside the local calling area without operator assistance, DDD was introduced in the United States in 1951, on a tri ...
(DDD) from this single location in the country with access to about eleven million telephone subscribers in ten metropolitan areas (Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Milwaukee, Oakland, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Providence, Sacramento, San Francisco) across the nation. From the customer dialing experience in the Englewood DDD trials, Bell Laboratories engineers gained the confidence to predict that customers would use the new numbering plan with a ''reasonable degree of convenience and accuracy''. As a result a second installation of DDD was planned for Washington, D.C. for the Fall of 1953, with the improvement of centralized AMA (CAMA), over the previous local billing arrangement in Englewood. After the success of these trials, expansion of the numbering plan accelerated with new crossbar systems and four new area codes in 1953, and seven in 1954. By the end of the decade thirty-one new area codes had been created in addition to the initial allotment of 1947. to satisfy the post-war surge in demand for telephone service. While the first customer-dialed call using an area code was made in 1951, it took nearly fifteen years after the 1947 announcement of the new numbering plan that direct distance dialing was common in most cities. By then, some of the initial criteria for assignment, such as the 0/1 rule for single/multiple NPA assignments in a given state had to be abandoned by new requirements from population shifts and growth of communication services. In 1960, AT&T engineers, estimating that the capacity of the numbering plan would be exhausted by 1975, prepared for the next major advance in the evolution of the network by eliminating central office names, and introducing all-number calling (ANC). ANC, once supplemented by
interchangeable central office code Interchangeability can refer to: *Interchangeable parts Interchangeable parts are parts (wikt:component#Noun, components) that are identical for practical purposes. They are made to specifications that ensure that they are so nearly identical t ...
s during the 1970s, increased the number of central office prefixes possible in each numbering plan area from 540 to an eventual maximum of 792.


See also

* List of future North American area codes *
List of North American Numbering Plan area codes The North American Numbering Plan (NANP) divides the territories of its members into geographic numbering plan areas (NPAs). Each NPA is identified by one or more numbering plan area codes (''NPA codes'', or ''area code A telephone numbering plan ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Original NANP area codes * Telephone numbers in the United States Telephone numbers in Canada Area codes in the United States Area codes in Canada Telecommunications-related introductions in 1947 Telephony