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PRIVACY
Economic Development

How a city answered the call when the time came

Birmingham's BT Tower looms large over the city - but its roots run even deeper. Enda Mullen speaks to the telecom firm's head of archives, David Hay, about why it is so connected to the city.

Insights into the evolution of telecommunications in Birmingham have been unveiled as BT continues to digitise an archive that stretches back more than a century and a half.

BT – formerly British Telecom – might have only come into being in 1984, but the firm’s roots stretch back to 1846 via the GPO, the National Telephone Company (NCT) and the Electric Telegraph Company.

And many elements of these forerunners remain. and one of the finest Victorian buildings in the city, Telephone House, is still in use as an office.

Over its lengthy history in Birmingham, BT has maintained a remarkable archive.

A major part of that is the Bell Edison Telephone Building at 19 Newhall Street. Known as The Exchange it is occupied by Core Marketing and Phoenix Beard with Bushwackers bar in the basement.

The Victorian Gothic red brick building was originally a National Telephone Company building and was designed in 1896 by Frederick Martin of the firm Martin & Chamberlain.

Built as the new Central Telephone Exchange and offices for the National Telephone Company it was popularly known as the Bell Edison Telephone Building.

At one point the exchange had 5,000 subscribers and was the largest of its type in the country.