Ma Bell's Place
by Vic Sumner
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", April 1987, page 32
THE TRIALS OF MISS WALKER
As I dipped into my bag of memories recently, I recalled a tale that might
give you an inkling of what it was like to be a fair maid just entering the
workaday telephone world of the late 1800's.
Our story begins in 1879 at the telephone office located on the second floor
of Tom Murray's Saloon in Springfield, Illinois. Our maiden, a thin skinned girl
of seventeen, had just been hired to replace Angus, a quarrelsome young male
operator. Angus had been sacked for offering to settle a dispute with a
subscriber "out back in the alley."
Her first assignment consisted of watching the not-too-bright manager take
and make several calls at the switchboard. He also explained the bookkeeping
which consisted of recording the calls by the name of the caller and the date on
a piece of scratch paper. The schooling took all of ten minutes and at the
conclusion Mister Manager notified her that he would be out all day, every day,
as he had to set the poles, string wire, install the phones, collect the bills,
answer trouble complaints, care for the company horse and wagon, etc. He was a
very busy man and expected her to cope with whatever came along. Some things he
neglected to tell her were her wages, hours of work and (later to prove the most
stressing) the location of the ladies' "facilities" and how one uses
them while attending to the needs of the switchboard.
After such a trying beginning, it might be assumed our girl was in for a time
of it. The day, however, went well...that is, until 5:00 p.m. when Murray's
Saloon, downstairs, opened for business. She quickly discovered that the floor
was nearly as thin as her skin and she observed she could hear every work spoken
by the revelers below. Having, during the day, been informed she was to close up
shop at 6:00 p.m., she managed to survive the one hour of assaults to her
gentility with but a few red-faced moments.
On the following Saturday, however, the saloon doors opened at 9:00 a.m. Our
"delicate flower" had to put up with a full day of bawdy laughter and
foul words. She bore these indignities partly because she didn't understand much
of what was said and partly because she didn't dare complain...being the only
female in town with a regular paying job!
Later in the day as the boys were gathering up steam below, she heard a
comment too personal to endure. You see, the fledgling operator was named Ima
Walker, and Angus, the fired operator who knew she could probably hear his every
work, suggested to his companions that her middle name was "Street."
Being of genteel disposition she just couldn't cope with this affront, so she
rang up her widowed mother. After hearing of poor Ima's embarrassment, her
mother picked up her skirts plus a heavy cane and made a beeline for the saloon.
She was hardly through the swinging door before she began swinging. If it was
attention she wanted, it was attention she got after smashing every glass and
bottle on the bar plus a few fingers that proved reluctant to let go of their
booze. She made it plain she intended to deliver a thrashing to the man who had
sullied her precious darling's name if he would but come forth. Needless to say
she got no takers and there was a noticeable shortage of patrons before she wore
out.
Hearing the uproar below and fearing her mother was being harmed, Ima
hastened to ring up the town Constable, who, upon surveying the devastation in
Murray's, promptly deposited Mother in the hoosegow.
Upon hearing the events in the saloon and of Miss Walker's role, our manager
friend fired the poor maiden and replaced her with an older woman who had
suffered a less protected upbringing. Later in Murray's, the manager was heard
to complain about "all the lost time I suffered training that girl. But
that's what I get for hiring a girl to do a man's job."
MA
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