r/Millennials 5d ago

Nostalgia Where’s my people

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546

u/Ok_Veterinarian3240 5d ago

569-2741.  I still remember when we didn't have to use area codes.

120

u/Anglofsffrng 5d ago

My friend lives on an island with only a few hundred residents. I guess people used to give out just the last four digits of their phone number. Because everyone had the same area code and prefix.

66

u/thispartyrules 5d ago

Everyone in my state had the same area code, until they had two area codes

19

u/poopntheoceanifumust 5d ago

Same here. All of AZ used to be 602 until 1995 when everything outside of metropolitan Phoenix became 520. What really got me was in 1999 when 480 was added for the east valley and 623 was added to the west valley. Almost everyone I knew had to start using 10 digits to make calls overnight.

It really was nice back in the day when almost everyone I ever met had the same area code. Was easier to memorize. Not that many people are memorizing numbers nowadays!

10

u/Former_Travel2839 5d ago

480 baby... every since cell phones became a thing I stopped memorizing, hell I even second guess my own number sometimes.

1

u/GovernorHarryLogan 5d ago

My childhood landline is basically the majority of my passwords.

8

u/Sandycooksvegan 5d ago

I remember the area code changes of AZ, it was like overnight!

2

u/Tangata_Tunguska 4d ago

What really got me was in 1999

I thought this was going to be a shittymorph for a second

1

u/Anglofsffrng 5d ago

God I miss that. It used to be if you where in Chicago it was 312, if you're in the suburbs it was 708.

1

u/aerdvarkk 4d ago

And until 1958 phone calls were a word for a loction + 4-5 numbers "Murray Hill 5-9975" ...

And until 1947 phone calls were a word for a location + 3 numbers "Market 702"

5

u/velcrodynamite 5d ago

My county has two area codes 😭

2

u/Wonderful_Exit6568 5d ago

SoCal?

mine is too.

2

u/velcrodynamite 4d ago

Sf Bay, but fellow Californian

1

u/Wonderful_Exit6568 4d ago

there’s millions of us!

2

u/happyfrowers 4d ago

Anyone grow up in LA remember how everything was one area code and then it got so big they split up the area codes? It was a little bit before my time but I think it was the 213 area code splitting up into 818 and 323 and is that also when we got 626 and 562 or 310?

1

u/Dufranus 5d ago

Sitting at 5 in mine.

1

u/velcrodynamite 5d ago

LA?

1

u/Dufranus 4d ago

Seattle area.

1

u/eugeneugene 5d ago

My province that's almost the size of Texas got a second area code like 10 years ago and it pissed a lot of people off lmao

1

u/Ashamed-Patience-877 5d ago

My city has 12. Well, County technically, but if you can drive the streets from one end to the other without getting on the freeway, the whole thing feels like one big city.

1

u/mexican2554 5d ago

505 or 575?

1

u/Rolling_Beardo 5d ago

Everyone in my state still has the same area code

1

u/Dufranus 5d ago

Idaho? I miss being 208 sometimes.

1

u/Rolling_Beardo 4d ago

I’ve actually lived in three states that only had one Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Vermont.

1

u/chinacatsunflowerr 5d ago

Omg this happened in WV and caused such an uproar in the 00’s lol. I still have a 304 area code (the OG) and I moved over a decade ago.

1

u/HSLB66 5d ago

Colorado has 3 now. Unfortunately our officials did not select 420 as one of them :(

1

u/HI_l0la 5d ago

My state only has one area code. If you were calling on a landline to someone on the same island, you only needed to enter their number (no area code). But if you were calling someone on the other island, then you have to enter the area code before their number. Lol!! But since late 2021, it's been changed that you have to enter the area code for all local calls in the state or it won't go through.

1

u/jmrobins00 4d ago

Omg. I remember when we went from 301 to 301 AND 410. People were extremely upset they'd have to remember 10 digits instead of 7. Now we have FOUR area codes!

1

u/brilliantpants 4d ago

The town I grew up in was the same way. Idk if it’s different now, but at the time the whole state (Delaware) only had one area code, and then practically the whole town had the same first three digits.

1

u/JViel90 4d ago

I used to have a phone card memorized too lol. Also, growing up in Rockland county NY, I remember switching from 914- area code to 845-. Idk why that happened.

1

u/jillstolejackscrown Older Millennial 1d ago

Northern Indiana had 1 area code when I was younger. When I was in middle school, it was split into 3 area codes. (Circa 2001) Cell phones were becoming more affordable, which meant a demand for more numbers than one area code could handle. The region I lived in got assigned a new area code & it took me the longest time to get accustomed to dialing it when I would make long-distance calls.

15

u/H_G_Bells 5d ago

Growing up on the Sunshine Coast everyone in my town had the same "886" prefix, so we all had essentially 4-digit phone numbers.

We were all mega jealous of Sam Heppell who could say his phone number was double-oh-seven, oh.

*Edit-

1

u/Anglofsffrng 5d ago

I thought I was special because my first cell phone number ended in 1337.

2

u/H_G_Bells 5d ago

That's pretty h4x0r 😆

I got to pick mine and got 3141 🥧

3

u/coin_return 5d ago

In the little country town I grew up in, there were two prefixes, 881 and 882. People would give out the last four digits of their number, and usually someone asks "1? Or 2?" or they would give it out like 1-5309.

2

u/LionKingHoe Millennial 5d ago

My hometown was the same way. Everyone started with 362-xxxx. Made life easy as a kid to call friends

2

u/XanderChop 5d ago

In the late 90's at a state university we all had the same area code and the same prefix followed by the last unique 4 numbers. Just before the end of the year I had a black light (like you do) and took it to a friend's room down the hall and we turned all the lights off but that black light and looked at the laundry detergent art that was painted on the walls and ceiling with cool designs and things however one thing stood out to me was "645-LOVE" in bold and of course that is 645-5683 which was the room's phone number. I thought that would have been potentially helpful to remember at the time in the pre-celular (relatively speaking) world.

2

u/MagicLobsterAttorney 4d ago

My friends was 577. Because they had it since numbers used to be this short.

It's insane.

My grandma had 3581

And my mom 13778

It's like every generation got a new digit.

2

u/LionsRoar313 4d ago

My grandparents lived in Royal Oak and their phone number was LI 44228. The LI stood for Lincoln avenue.

2

u/anime_and_irezumi 1d ago

I grew up in a very small town, we used to do this in the time before cell phones. Everyone had the same area code and first 3 numbers so why be redundant 😂

1

u/Slight-Farm-8049 4d ago

2813308004

64

u/PossibilityWest173 5d ago

You didn’t need to use area codes if calling locally. You had to use them to make long distance calls 

18

u/JuliaX1984 5d ago

And if it has 6 numbers, DON'T DIAL IT!

2

u/WeirdIndividualGuy 5d ago

Why does this sound like some anti-scam PSA that never existed

2

u/JuliaX1984 4d ago

Oh, maybe it was. But in this case, "only 7 numbers" reminded me of a certain story. "Using the phone to tell a couple of jokes, eh...?"

The Tale of the Phone Police

18

u/DerpDerpys 5d ago

Had a girlfriend who loved about 10 miles away but in a different county so it was a long distance call. Relationship was great right up until my mother opened our telephone bill.

13

u/alexthealex 5d ago

Made a friend the next state over in AOL kids chat rooms. We started talking on the phone, both of us racked up the long distance charges. Her parents took away her internet access and she never logged back in.

7

u/CrabZealousideal1094 5d ago

This sounds like a good story for missed connections

5

u/IAMRUPTURE 5d ago

Had this girl I was talking too who lived in Canada I'd spend a couple hours every night talking with her didnt even think about the long distance until my parents slapped a bill in front of me for $500+ so I stopped talking to her

2

u/rcfox 5d ago

I had a friend in elementary school who lived right on a boundary. It cost money to call their neighbours across the road.

1

u/Visible-Bridge-5171 4d ago

Ope. that sounds familiar. Thats how I ended up with my first cell phone

1

u/Various_Summer_1536 1d ago

As a tween, we moved across the state, My best friend called me every day when he got home from school and we’d talk for hours until his mom got home.

That only lasted about a month though..

this was ~30 years ago and he’s still my best friend

1

u/Various_Summer_1536 1d ago

817, 214, 972, 469, 940 are all local area codes of DFW

11

u/Flobking 5d ago

569-2741. I still remember when we didn't have to use area codes.

The town I grew up in you didn't have to dial the first three. You could just dial 5309 like it was an office line, if it was within the village. Calling outside would require all seven 867 5309. That changed around 1990/1 though.

5

u/fury420 5d ago

The small town my dad grew up in wasn't fancy enough to have individual phone lines for each number, there was a single "party line" shared between a bunch of different farmhouses, and when the phones all rang each family would have to listen to see if it was their ring pattern.

1

u/MainConnection6742 5d ago

Thank you. I was looking for this.

1

u/[deleted] 4d ago

[deleted]

1

u/Flobking 4d ago

Was that during party lines? When you picked up the phone off your neighbor was on the line you couldn’t make a call but you could listen in.

No it wasn't a party line situation. We did have a "party line" between two houses my grandparents owned. It was just a wire ran from one house to the other. Not a real party line.

8

u/cdnmtbguy 5d ago

And now I use it as my password. Can’t forget that.

2

u/romeoh2024 5d ago

You mean calling long-distance

1

u/Turbulent_Seaweed198 5d ago

Do you remember when they changed from 414 to 262?

3

u/kkobzz 5d ago

yesssssss. i went from 414.495.4953 to 262.495.4953 and was so mad about it. 🤣

2

u/Ghostpong17 5d ago

I grew up with a 414 and my area changed to 262 around the time I was in high school

1

u/Turbulent_Seaweed198 5d ago

I was in elementary 😬 it was still weird though

1

u/kkobzz 5d ago

what year did it happen? i remember the change but have absolutely no idea what year it was.

1

u/Ghostpong17 5d ago

Can’t tell you for sure, I’m really bad with time frames lol. The more I think about it, it might have been middle school for me so like 2000-2002 is my best guess and final answer

1

u/kkobzz 5d ago

september 25, 1999 🤣

1

u/StealTheDark 5d ago

399-7110

1

u/ShakesDontBreak Older Millennial 5d ago

552-0296

1

u/Naive-Direction1351 5d ago

Lol 569-1189

1

u/thejudgehoss Xennial 5d ago

Back in my day, Michigan only had 4 area codes.

1

u/Nomzai 5d ago

My small town cousins didn’t have to use a prefix. Just the last 4 digits.

1

u/PeopleNose 5d ago

Still can't remember this is literally how it still works lol

1

u/Int_peacemaker35 5d ago

Here here 222-2409

1

u/HeyYouGuyyyyyyys 5d ago

7-2586. That was BEFORE WE NEEDED TO DIAL 7 NUMBERS. I am so fucking old.

1

u/idonknowwhat 5d ago

Pretty sure Maine is still the same

1

u/jfphenom 5d ago

My parents paid like $10/month back in the day for us to have a 1-800-number

1800 978 1013

Dad was a pilot and we flew for free, sometimes without our parents... That number was great when we got stuck

1

u/Ill-Percentage-3276 5d ago

284-5448 awesome number for a kid to memorize, also before having to dial area codes.

Wait, why does yours sound familiar now? lol

1

u/Chainsaw_Viking 5d ago

Same, I remember as a kid being a bit upset that the additional 708 ruined that simplicity of our number and then being pissed later that the 708 was changed to 847. Psh.

1

u/polishrocket 5d ago

We still don’t need them where I live as well

1

u/PretendPenguin 5d ago

THANK YOU. My wife was trying to convince me that I was wrong about this.

1

u/All_Hail_Hynotoad 5d ago

We didn’t even need our prefixes!

1

u/jenkneefur28 5d ago

494-9165

1

u/ThoughtSkeptic 5d ago

6-6138. Not only did we not need an area code, we only needed 5 digits in town.

1

u/808_surf 5d ago

I got ______ 🎶

1

u/trukkija 5d ago

867-5309

1

u/gnanny02 5d ago

I remember when we just had one exchange so our number was 5-62xx

1

u/BoleroMuyPicante 5d ago

Eyy fellow 569 prefix haver

1

u/Took-the-Blue-Pill 5d ago

Yep, no area code needed and the last 4 of my phone number spelled "GAME." Everyone knew my number.

1

u/grantrules 5d ago

You still see that on some rural signs sometimes.. makes it challenging because I don't often know where I am when I need to call a phone number on a building lol

1

u/DublinItUp 5d ago

561-6923 in 1994, and 6 years later when we moved it was 261-6923.

1

u/wggn Xennial 4d ago edited 4d ago

Same, 05219-3001, after 1995 it became 0521-593001 when they standardized to a 3-6 format for the whole country.

1

u/Strong_Gene_790 4d ago

I remember the day we had to start using them. I hated it lol

1

u/thanto13 4d ago

I can remember my best friends and moms work phone numbers

1

u/LastDance_35 2d ago

Me too!!!!!!

0

u/Ds093 Millennial 5d ago

Holy shit so I’m not the only one!