World's
First 9-1-1 Call
Haleyville, AL - February 16, 1968
The following is a brief recount of the events surrounding the
placing of the nation's first 9-1-1 call.
Before Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, (June 2, 1875) public
safety was served by town criers. A town crier would walk the streets of a town
and cry out for help in emergency situations.
In the 1950's, independent telephone companies were very common in the United
States. If you wanted the police, you dialed the police station. If you had a
fire, you called the fire department. If you needed any emergency help, you
dialed the individual you needed, or you could dial " 0" and get the operator.
Then he or she would ring the persons you were calling for.
In 1958, Congress called for an universal emergency number. At this time, the
President's Commission of Law Enforcement and the F.C.C. started arguing over a
single easy to remember number. This was due to the large volume of emergency
calls going to telephone company operators. A person may be calling for
emergency help while the operator was giving information on the number of Aunt
Betsy in Louisiana or Uncle Charles in Oklahoma, which lead to delays in
emergency responses. Telephone companies were facing the problem of how to
separate emergencies from general business. For over ten years the idea was
discussed and argued about among the different agencies who wanted to receive
the calls. Police said they should answer all calls, the Fire Department felt
they were the better choice, some even felt the local hospital was the best
answer.
According to a report in the Fayette, Alabama Times Record commemorating the
25th anniversary of the historic event, B.W. Gallagher, President of Alabama
Telephone Company, said he was inspired by an article in the Wall Street
Journal. He read that the president of AT&T and the FCC had announced that 911
would be the nationwide emergency number. Being a bit offended by the fact that
the views of the independent telephone industry had been overlooked in this
decision, Gallagher decided to make the Alabama Telephone Company the first to
implement 9-1-1.
Gallagher consulted with Robert Fitzgerald, inside plant manager for the Alabama
Telephone Company, who examined schematics of the company’s 27 exchanges.
Fitzgerald chose Haleyville because its existing equipment was best suited to be
quickly converted to receive 9-1-1 calls. Fitzgerald then designed the circuitry
and installed the first 911 system in less than a week. Working with Fitzgerald
to achieve this goal were technicians Pete Gosa, Jimmy White, Al Bush and Glenn
Johnston.
In the early stages, the city fathers were skeptical of 9-1-1 calls being
answered at the police station. They, like persons in Congress, were afraid that
the city might not have the personnel qualified to answer "all out emergency
calls".
Haleyville, Alabama introduced the nation's first 9-1-1 system which was located
at the police station. Alabama Speaker of the House, Rankin Fite, made the first
call from another city hall room. It was answered by Congressman Tom Bevill on a
bright red telephone located in the police department. Also on hand was
Haleyville Mayor James Whitt, Public Service Commission President Eugene (Bull)
Connor, and B. W. Gallagher. So on February 16, 1968, the first 9-1-1 call was
made.