Demand for Communication Services Increased
Telephone operators were first employed in 1874, when Bloomington business lines were installed. As the technology improved and expanded into private homes, the need for operators grew.
Featuring:
Marguerite (1896-1958) and Geraldine “Gerry” McKeon (1895-1975), telephone operators
Marguerite (1896-1958) and Geraldine “Gerry” McKeon (1895-1975) emigrated from Canada to the United States with their parents in 1910. At the age of 17, Marguerite got her first job working as an operator at Bloomington’s Kinloch Telephone Company. Her younger sister Gerry started at the phone company in 1915.
As operators Marguerite and Gerry used switches and cords to connect incoming calls. Their headsets and transmitters left their hands free to flip the necessary switches, select the appropriate line, and insert it into the correct circuits in order to connect the customer.
Gerry, Marguerite, and other female workers at the phone company struggled against gender stereotypes that limited their ability to get pay raises and improve working conditions — despite being members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW).
In 1918 Marguerite, Gladys Gibb, Frances Auth, Celia Kelly, and Bernadine Livings organized the Telephone Operators Department (TOD) 78-A of the IBEW.
Their union, the first telephone operators local in Illinois, was totally run by women. With 100 percent membership, they had the strength to make substantial gains for working women, including contracts for improved wages and working conditions.
That same year members of 78-A demonstrated their devotion to union concerns when they joined the Bloomington-Normal Trades and Labor Assembly (TLA), a union composed of all trade unions in the area. Marguerite quickly rose in the ranks. When she left Kinloch in 1921 to get married, she was chief operator.
Gerry worked for local phone companies until she retired in 1964.