Privateline.com Telephone History Series
Pages: (1)_(2)_(3)_(4)_(5)_(6)_(7)_(8)_(9) (10)
(11) (Communicating)
(Soundwaves) (Life at Western Electric)
[Editor's note: At the height
of its growth the Bell System employed over one million people,
employing them in thousands of different jobs. E-mail
me if you would like to tell your story here. Independent telephone employees are also welcome, indeed, it is much more difficult to get information on the work the Independents did than with Bell.]
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Work at WECO's Refurbishing Plant in the early 1970s, by Frank Harrell
Frank's site is here: http://nps-vip.net/
I worked for the C&P Telephone company in Northern Virginia
in the early 1970s. (C&P stands for The Chesapeake and Potomac
Telephone Company.) Specifically I worked within the Western
Electric refurbishing plant near the Pentagon which is now a
Costco, a large, warehouse type department store. We processed
all the phone equipment that was removed from houses and businesses
within the C&P area, that being the District of Columbia,
Virginia, Maryland, West Virginia, and Delaware.
The phones would be dumped on a conveyer and we had to pick
each one up, check its type number and color, sort them to specific
chutes, then match them to a computer punch card. They then went
to Western Electric for cleaning and repair. Equipment other
than the standard phones, were handled in separate areas. We
swapped work positions around every week. We processed an average
of 14,000 phone sets a day. Terrible job. Let me first talk about
the building itself, and then the work we did there.
The building as it stands now is between Hayes Street and
Fern Street in Arlington, Virginia. The site is about a half
mile south of the Pentagon.
It is now a mall called Pentagon Mall, with stores such as
Costco, Marshals, Borders, Linen 'n Things, Best Buy, and a bunch
of small shops. While there today, we didn't go into Costco but
looked in the door. It appears that the remodel did very little
to the warehouse area except to remove equipment, paint and replace
the lights. The ceiling and walls still look exactly as they
do in my 1972 photos.

The photograph above is the back of the building which shows
the old receiving dock where I worked. Most of the bays are now
bricked up. The 5 bays to the far right were the loading bays.
This entire area, about 1/4 of the building, is now the Costco
store.
The photo below shows the South side of the building. This
was the original employee parking lot. Today was New Years' Eve
day and the parking was totally crazy.

The photograph below is of the North West corner. The part
of the building to the right on this photo is what was the front
of the old WECO plant.

Now, let me talk about the work I did at the plant. . . .
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