DocumentCode
763661
Title
Vail versus Morgan: Control of the Start-Up Bell System
Author
Bellaver, Richard F.
Author_Institution
Ball State Univ., Muncie, IN, USA
Volume
21
Issue
2
fYear
2002
Firstpage
31
Lastpage
35
Abstract
Through years of teaching the history of the information and communication industry I have been confounded by what appears to be a specific reversal of attitude of AT&T in dealings with independent telephone companies (independents). I am referring to corporate policy between the years 1907 and 1913. Before Theodore Vail returned to AT&T in 1907, the corporation was regarded as a most predatory monopoly. Policy seemed to be, buy or force the independents out of business and don\´t let them connect to AT&T interstate circuits. That policy was closely followed until the 1913 Kingsbury Commitment reversed it completely. Something happened to the company, or to Vail, during this time period to cause a profound change in business focus. Did Vail have a non-predatory philosophy all along but lack authority to enforce it? Did religion impact his mindset or did some other profound experience help change his mind? Was it the pressure of the "trust busters" in Washington that forced the change? Or were the changes just a result of good business sense? I think J R Morgan really was the robber baron, and Vail was the white knight that set AT&T on the right path for the next 70 years
Keywords
telephony; AT&T; Theodore Vail; corporate policy; independent telephone companies; start-up Bell system; Adders; Communication system control; Companies; Control systems; Education; History; Permission; Remuneration; Telephony; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-0097
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MTAS.2002.1010055
Filename
1010055
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