Oregon trail generation here, and yup! It’s been wild to watch tech go from landlines, then add answering machines, fax machines, modems, then pagers, and finally cell-phones. In retrospect, why the kitchen??
As I remember it as a kid, people spent a lot of time in the kitchen. May have even wanted to chat on the phone while cooking. And there was no real counter space that you wanted to waste with a phone. So that’s why they were mounted on the wall.
Had a wall mounted phone in our kitchen growing up. That thing a had a massively long cord, too. You could walk through half the house with that handset. We were little kids running around and nearly clotheslining ourselves on the phone cord pretty regularly.
Oregon trail generation here, and yup! It’s been wild to watch tech go from landlines, then add answering machines, fax machines, modems, then pagers, and finally cell-phones. In retrospect, why the kitchen??
As I remember it as a kid, people spent a lot of time in the kitchen. May have even wanted to chat on the phone while cooking. And there was no real counter space that you wanted to waste with a phone. So that’s why they were mounted on the wall.
Had a wall mounted phone in our kitchen growing up. That thing a had a massively long cord, too. You could walk through half the house with that handset. We were little kids running around and nearly clotheslining ourselves on the phone cord pretty regularly.
I commented before seeing your comment. I also mentioned clotheslining siblings. So fun.
Did you play with the cord while you talked, trying to get the cord spirals to line up again?