I’m currently assembling a CD and liner notes on Richard Himber, popular bandleader and magic artist of the mid-20th century.
In 1932, Himber, a born promoter, acquired the vanity phone number R HIMBER for his New York booking office. I can’t find any history relating to vanity numbers on the web, and I’m wondering whether he might have had the first, or one of the first. Any background would be appreciated.
There was an account I read in American Heritage Magazine, oh, ten or more years ago that described what the author or letterwriter claimed was the first use of a vanity-type phone number. Two qualifiers: it was not for an individual, but for a public awareness campaign, and it may have been for an “800” number, not a regular toll number. In any case, the claim did not predate your Himber number.
According to the magazine story, in the 1950s or early 1960s some NYC executive who was part of the effort to spread the word about measles prevention or vaccination – I think there was a measles scare or outbreak in the city at the time – hit upon the idea of spelling out m-e-a-s-l-e-s for the hotline number. It was a huge success, btw, and has been copied ever since.
A friend sent me a scanned ad out of The New Yorker magazine from November 5, 1932. Himber advertised the services of 6 different orchestras for private functions and gave the number with the note “Try It - It Really Works.” He even promised “24 hour service,” which seems somewhat pointless unless he saw potential customers in club-crawling socialites.
Some Australian phone numbers are a digit shorter than others, even today. Perhaps an Australian doper can post more about this, it’s been a while since I’ve been down under.
I’ll second that. I’ve got a copy of my hometown’s phone directory from 1940. The coal company was 82, the Studebaker dealership was 900 and the mayor’s office was something like 852-H