ROSEVILLE, Calif.—I don’t know about you, but I marvel that, with a tiny device in my pocket, I can instantly hear the voice of any of my loved ones, any time, essentially for free.
Of course, this wasn’t always the case. I’m old enough (nearly 37!) to remember when the phone would ring from overseas relatives and my parents would remind us to hurry to the phone: IT’S LONG DISTANCE! And yes, my parents used to pick up the phone and disrupt my dial-up Internet escapades.
But our contemporary landscape, replete with theoretically smart handputers, has an amazing past that extends well beyond my lifetime.
So, if you want to be dazzled at a free museum located just outside Sacramento, may I present to you what might be the nerdiest and most obscure free museum in Northern California: the Roseville Telephone Museum. It claims to have “one of the most extensive collections of antique telephones and memorabilia in the nation.”
How, pray tell, did I discover this tiny locale that only opens for four hours on the first Saturday of the month? I’ll be honest: it’s up the street from my new favorite brewpub in town—the closest one to my mother-in-law’s home. (Also, it’s across the street from Railroad Hobbies, for all your model train needs.)
Earlier this month, I stepped inside this small brick building, not sure of what to expect.
I was immediately greeted by a dazzling collection of “Brookfield Insulators"—tiny glass objects whose provenance I never would have guessed. There was a Stromberg Carlson Telephone (Type C-8, of course) from 1935 and an Ansafone Corporation Ansa Fone Telephone Answering Machine dating back to 1965.
The most amazing thing was that this collection just kept going, and going, and going. Everything was meticulously labeled and organized, largely in chronological order.
I was grateful for the docents who meandered about and were all too happy to not only answer all my dumb questions, but they were even enthusiastic about giving live demos of a more-than-century-old magneto switchboard.

Loading comments...