International Find A Pay Phone Booth Day

Happy International Find a Pay Phone Booth Day! It’s increasingly rare to find a working payphone as I discussed in this story last month but it’s almost impossible to find one in an actual phone booth. However, I do know where you’ll find one!

It’s in the lobby of the Athena Grand movie theater in Athens, Ohio. There’s even a sign posted inside that let’s folks know that it really works.

It was on this day in 1876 that Alexander Graham Bell made the world’s first ever telephone call. It was to his assistant in the next room. Less than two years later, Thomas Doolittle created the first phone booth which he called a “telephone cabinet.”

While this invention would change the world in ways he may never have dreamed, Bell refused to have a telephone in his study because he feared it would be too much of a distraction from his work. I suspect he was a fan of the phone booth because you would have to be purposeful in going out to use the phone rather than spending hours in an endless conversation at home. 

If you’re serious about celebrating today, go out and look for a phone booth! If you find one, maybe convince some friends to engage in the age old tradition of phonebooth stuffing! That’s where you see how many people you can fit into a phone booth. Wikipedia tells me that on March 20, 1959, students in South Africa set a world record when 25 of them were able to squeeze at least the greater portions of their bodies into a standard phone booth. 

See if you can beat that!

And if you can’t, maybe just take a selfie and report back here where you found your phone booth. I enjoy hearing about pay phones out in the wild!

The Dymaxion House

How would you like to live in a cool looking round house that’s energy efficient and easy to move?

If Buckminster Fuller had his way, that’s exactly how we all would live – in his Dymaxion House. Sadly, his ideas about affordable, environmentally efficient and portable housing were ahead of his time in the thirties and forties.

That’s right, all those soldiers coming home from World War II may have ended up in communities of these shiny houses that resemble an Airstream trailer or maybe a Jetson’s house.

Instead, squares and rectangles of wood and brick won out and houses continued to balloon in size with every passing year.

Fuller was an inventor and architect who reimagined human shelter and dreamed of how mass production could revolutionize the way people live.

With space saving moves like revolving closets, a gallery kitchen complete with built-in appliances, and an easily adaptable floor plan, it sounds pretty appealing to the modern mind. It could even withstand harsh weather.

Sadly, Fuller never found financial backing for his project. A prototype was created by Beech Aircraft Corp in 1946 and was the only one ever sold. It was purchased by a fellow named William Graham who combined this house with a traditional ranch. I’m guessing it simply wasn’t big enough for his family but he liked the idea.

Graham’s family donated the house to the Henry Ford Museum in the early nineties and it’s been on display there for going on twenty years. This is a fantastic exhibit. You do have to wait in line for a few minutes on busy days because they limit the number of people allowed inside at one time. I thank them for that.

It’s a cool thing to tour and would be an amazing place to live if you don’t have many possessions. As a hoarder of books, handbags and assorted oddities, I would need to build on a ranch home as well!

Not to mention, the kitchen is way too tiny for my brand of dish hoarding and recipe experimentation.

If you go, be sure to read the posters and displays on your way in to the house and watch the short film at the end. It tells the story beautifully.

This is just one of many unusual things you’ll find at the Henry Ford. If you go, allow a day for the museum and a day for Greenfield Village. Click here to visit their website!

I’ve also written about it a few times including my experience at the Rosa Parks bus and about the planes, trains and automobiles here.