Back when payphones existed did you regularly use them?

Here is a map of the ones in just seven counties near where I live
https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/4758099a49c84ad4bfe0bbde163643b0/
Looks like they are going the way of the pay phone as well.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_box

Decline in usage​

In California, freeway callboxes were used about 98,000 times in 2001. That number dropped by 80 percent to 19,600 times in 2010, or about 1 call per box per month. The cost of callboxes for the Service Authority for Freeways and Expressways (SAFE) program in the San Francisco Bay area is $1.7 million annually. As a result, since 2009 approximately half of the callboxes have been removed from certain California highways, preferentially leaving them only in places where cell phone coverage is poor.

Florida previously had callboxes installed at one-mile intervals along all its Interstate Highways as well as Florida's Turnpike. These boxes were all removed by 2014 after a 65-percent decrease in usage over an eight-year period, in line with increased mobile phone usage. The boxes were costing the state roughly $1 million per year to keep operational.
 
Looks like they are going the way of the pay phone as well.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_box

Decline in usage​

In California, freeway callboxes were used about 98,000 times in 2001. That number dropped by 80 percent to 19,600 times in 2010, or about 1 call per box per month. The cost of callboxes for the Service Authority for Freeways and Expressways (SAFE) program in the San Francisco Bay area is $1.7 million annually. As a result, since 2009 approximately half of the callboxes have been removed from certain California highways, preferentially leaving them only in places where cell phone coverage is poor.

Florida previously had callboxes installed at one-mile intervals along all its Interstate Highways as well as Florida's Turnpike. These boxes were all removed by 2014 after a 65-percent decrease in usage over an eight-year period, in line with increased mobile phone usage. The boxes were costing the state roughly $1 million per year to keep operational.
The other issue is how totally useless California has discovered cell phones can be in emergencies like wildfires. In Santa Rosa, the entire cellular system was down because towers had all burned up in the first few hours of the fire and it took days to get temporary portable cell sites set up. It appears that all Roadside Emergency Phones installed since 2015 are solar powered satellite phones to avoid that problem. Of course, in Santa Rosa's case, landlines were not impacted. They were all underground and the phone company system was able to generate power to keep them operating. We got a plea from the hospitals in Santa Rosa to put out the word to their employees checking in to not call their supervisors cell phone numbers, as they were down....but to call the landlines numbers in the hospital.
 
That reminds me of roads that used to have periodic call boxes.

I can't remember the last time I saw a highway with call boxes. I wonder if those still exist anywhere? I-185 here in Georgia had them, but I have not been on that interstate in years.

I believe all the roadway call boxes around here were removed ten or more years ago now.
 

Used them primarily in the parks to call back home to see if I could stay out later, friends and I would bike ride all over the place often ending up in a park and back then rule was dinner time best be home unless you call ahead.
 
Especially in high school we had a few phone s in the school so we could call at lunch or sneak a call.
Come get me at the mall or roller rink.

Got my drivers license so that cut down on calls until pagers came out lol.
 
You have received a call from, “Mom come pick me up!”

Would you like to accept this call?
Nope all set! Lol
 
The other issue is how totally useless California has discovered cell phones can be in emergencies like wildfires. In Santa Rosa, the entire cellular system was down because towers had all burned up in the first few hours of the fire and it took days to get temporary portable cell sites set up. It appears that all Roadside Emergency Phones installed since 2015 are solar powered satellite phones to avoid that problem. Of course, in Santa Rosa's case, landlines were not impacted. They were all underground and the phone company system was able to generate power to keep them operating. We got a plea from the hospitals in Santa Rosa to put out the word to their employees checking in to not call their supervisors cell phone numbers, as they were down....but to call the landlines numbers in the hospital.

landlines don't require electricity from any source to operate though most folks that still have them tend to have cordless phones which do NOT work absent electricity. I've still got an old corded phone I used to plug in when the power went out before we got our whole house generator. my brother had to hunt one down when he was pre generator purchase and his area in northern california lost not only their regular power but also their cell phone access when pg&e included the cell towers in that region's rolling blackouts.
 
landlines don't require electricity from any source to operate though most folks that still have them tend to have cordless phones which do NOT work absent electricity. I've still got an old corded phone I used to plug in when the power went out before we got our whole house generator. my brother had to hunt one down when he was pre generator purchase and his area in northern california lost not only their regular power but also their cell phone access when pg&e included the cell towers in that region's rolling blackouts.
Landline phones get their power from the phone company (through the phone line).
 
Yup, in high school when practice was over and I needed to be picked up. Used either change or collect call from “pickmeup”. I also called my parents collect from college.
 












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