Size app.: 30,2 x 17 x 22 cm (roughly 11.88 x 6.69 x 8.66 in). Pretty good condition, age and usage wear, damages, losses. Please study high-res pictures for cosmetic condition! In person actual item may appear darker or brighter than in our pictures, strictly depending on sufficient light in your environment. Weight of app. 6.2 kg it is going to measure some 8 kg packed for shipment.
Alexander Graham Bell is credited with inventing the telephone in 1876. Within two years the U.S. Army began using telephones. Lieutenant A. H. Bagnold, RE, produced a drawing for a telephone in October 1877, and the Indian Army used field telephones, designed and manufactured by Lieutenant G.R.R. Savage, RE, in regimental workshops, for operations in Peshawar in December 1877. Later telephones were installed in Royal Garrison Artillery fortresses in Britain. It took some time for British officers to accept this new instrument because the early telephones were unreliable and there was no written copy of the message sent. The extensive use of telephones in the latter stages of the Boer war, however, proved their military worth. During the Boer War much use was made of the existing civilian telephones and telephone exchanges, but for field use specially designed telephones and exchanges had to be produced. The “C Mark 1” and the “D Mark 1” were the first of a whole family of field telephones to be developed for the British Army. The Telegraph Battalion’s sections laid 18,000 miles of telegraph and telephone cable during this war. A total of 13,500,000 messages were handled in 4 years and the Battalion grew in strength from 600 to 2,500 men. General French used telegraph and the telephone to direct his flank formations and they were also used on the battlefield to control artillery fire. This was the first time that the Telegraph Battalion had provided tactical as well as strategic communications for the Army. This was also the first war in which telephones were used in any number and an attempt was made by the British Army to operate wireless for the first time in a campaign, but atmospheric conditions proved unsuitable. During the last phase of the was the country was divided by a chain of blockhouses linked by telephones operated by the Telegraph Battalion. L. M. Ericsson & Co was founded in 1876, becoming a limited company in 1896. The first foreign factory was established a year later in St. Petersburg, and the first foreign office in London in 1898. The British L. M. Ericsson Mfg Co Ltd head office was at International Buidlings, 67/73 Kingsway, London WC2, with a factory subsequently set up at Beeston, Notts.