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Agreed Broadband was not envisaged in the 1940s.
This estate including my (former show-) house was built in 1967, as the first estate on and beyond the town boundary separated from the town by a large public park and school sports field, with 4 other estates "further out" built over the succeeding years.
So no point in trying to get a move on to another PCP/DP.
Although the estate itself had every house wired for phone during that 1967 build, running back to the PCP, plus main cable back to the exchange, there was no significant capacity in that existing Strowger exchange to take any more working lines.
About 1972, the Strowger system was going to be totally replaced in a new exchange building, by a Cross-Bar system.
Two senior Post Office Telephone Managers came to see me one Saturday morning, resulting in my being connected to one of the emergency reserved lines in the old Strowger exchange.
All of the others on the estate still had no connections.
About a month later, still 1972, the temporary Strowger connection was swapped over on to the Cross-Bar system in a completely new, larger building, resulting in a number change as well. Still got the two circular inserts with the appropriate numbers on them.
By 1978, 76 of the 77 houses definitely had working phones, so about 98% "penetration" at least, compared to the then Scottish average of 55%, 65% for England. (National figures obtained that year from Post Office Telephones. Estate figures by going around the doors.)
About 1992, callers were having difficulties phoning us, which was particularly a nuisance as my lady-wife was the Senior District Nursing Sister, frequently on-call etc. The fault was in the Cross-Bar system, apparently it was occasionally making contact with the Police Station line.
Fortunately our line had "Red Card" priority; but it took months to be cleared, by moving our line in the exchange on to the newer System X, with another number change - and there is a story to that in itself.
So as regards the main D and E-side wiring, there have been no obvious moves/changes in that area, apart from the mass move to the Cross-Bar, which involved every then-subscriber in the town, from a small exchange building at the back of some shops, to a much larger building about 150 metres away.
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