The first telephone book was one page long and had only 50 names in it.
The First Phone Book Was Just One Page with 50 Names
On February 21, 1878, the New Haven District Telephone Company published the world's first telephone directory. It wasn't a book at all—just a single sheet of cardboard listing exactly 50 subscribers. But here's the kicker: it didn't include a single phone number.
Why no numbers? Because every call was connected manually by a switchboard operator. You'd pick up the receiver, tell the operator who you wanted to talk to, and they'd physically connect the wires. With only 50 people on the network, operators could memorize the whole list.
Who Made the Cut?
Only eleven of the fifty listings were residences. The rest? Businesses, doctors, the police department, and the post office. Having a telephone in 1878 was a serious status symbol—it cost $1.50 per month (about $45 today) at a time when the average worker made less than $2 per day.
The directory was created less than a month after the exchange opened with just 21 subscribers. By publication day, they'd more than doubled to 50. The telephone was catching on fast.
From One Page to Forty
Within nine months, subscriptions exploded nearly eightfold to 391 users. The company had to publish an actual book—a 40-page pamphlet that included:
- Names of all 391 subscribers
- Step-by-step instructions on how to use a telephone
- Proper telephone etiquette (people had never done this before!)
This was necessary because telephones were so new that most people had no idea how to operate them. The concept of speaking into a device and being heard miles away was borderline magical.
A Priceless Piece of History
Today, only two copies of that original one-page directory are known to survive. One belongs to the University of Connecticut Library. In 2008, a copy of the nine-month follow-up book sold at auction for $170,500.
That single page represents the humble beginning of something that would become ubiquitous—phone books eventually grew into thousand-page behemoths delivered to every home. Now, they've almost completely vanished, replaced by smartphones that can access billions of numbers instantly. From 50 names on cardboard to the entire world in your pocket—not bad for 147 years of progress.