Eve's Wireless

Combine a fire hydrant, an umbrella, and a heavy wooden box, and you've got the components of a circa-1922 mobile phone. Add a cheerful operator and a phonograph to the mix, and you've got your own flapper-era Siri playing music on demand.



When you think of early mobile phones, you probably think of one of these 1980s-style bricks:






Motorola Brick






Or perhaps if you're an old-timer, you might recall these spiffy 1970s numbers that basically required you to haul a car battery everywhere you went:






Bosch Mobile Phone






But friends, these technological marvels of the 1970s and 1980s were lazy latecomers compared to Eve's "portable wireless phone":






Eve's Wireless Phone






Eve's wireless was documented in a 1922 silent film recently uncovered by British Pathé. In the movie, Eve hauls her contraption around in a heavy box ("and won't hubby have a time when he has to carry one!"), grounds it to a convenient fire hydrant, and unfurls her umbrella antenna to make a call. An obliging operator answers and plays Eve some music on her new-fangled phonograph.









Hard to tell thanks to grainy film quality, but the device looks to be a Home-o-Fone, manufactured by New York City's own Radio Receptor Company, Inc.




homeofone_988965







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Published on November 27, 2011 20:15
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