Bell System
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The Bell System was a trademark and service mark used by the U.S. telecommunications company American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) and its affiliated companies to co-brand their extensive circuit-switched telephone network and their affiliations with each other.
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History
Image:Bell System Logo 1921-1939.gif The Bell trademark (pictured right) used by both the AT&T corporation and the regional operating corporations from 1921 to 1939 to co-brand themselves under a single Bell System trademark would have the regional operating corporation's name where the "name of associated company" appears in this boilerplate version of the trademark.
A 1956 consent agreement limited AT&T to engaging in only activities related to a maximum of 85% of the United States' national telephone network and certain government contracts, which precluded the Bell System from extending its reach into the fledgling computer industry and from continuing to hold interests in Canada and the Caribbean. The Bell System's Canadian operations included the Bell Canada regional operating company and the Northern Electric manufacturing subsidiary of the Bell System's Western Electric equipment manufacturer. Northern Electric and Bell Canada were spun off in 1956 as separate companies outside of the Bell System proper. The Bell System's Caribbean regional operating companies were sold to the then ITT.
Prior to the 1956 break-up that restricted the boundaries of the Bell System, the Bell System also included the Northern Electric subsidiary of Western Electric, the Bell Canada regional operating company, and various Caribbean regional operating companies, as well as 54% ownership of NEC and a post-WWII-reconstruction relationship with NTT. Prior to 1956, the Bell System's reach was truly gargantuan, as the list below of now-divested formerly-held corporations indicates. Even during the period from 1956 to 1984, the Bell System's dominant reach into all forms of communications was pervasive within the United States and influential in telecommunication standardization throughout the industrialized world.
The 1984 Bell System divestiture that brought an end to the affiliation branded as the Bell System was the result of a lawsuit alleging illegal practices by the Bell System companies to stifle competition in the telecommunications industry; the lawsuit was brought against it by the United States Department of Justice (DOJ). That lawsuit was filed in 1974, and was settled on January 8, 1982, displacing the former restrictions that AT&T and the DOJ had agreed to in 1956 based on a previous anti-trust lawsuit filed by the DOJ in 1949 that alleged that AT&T and its Bell System operating companies were using its near monopoly in telecommunications to attempt to establish allegedly unfair advantage in related technologies, especially the fledgling computer industry.
Prior to the 1984 break-up that ended the Bell System, the Bell System included not only AT&T corporate and its long-lines long-distance routing but also many local exchange carriers (LECs). In 1984, the Bell System also included the Western Electric equipment manufacturing unit, the Bell Labs corporate research unit, and the BELLCORE regional operating companies' research unit.
On March 5, 2006, AT&T announced plans to merge with BellSouth, which would provide services to 70 million subscribers in 22 states, and gain 100% ownership of Cingular Wireless. This has led some market analysts to believe that the old Bell System may reassemble.
Present-day usage of the Bell name
The Bell System trademark (as diagram) and service mark (as the words Bell System in text) was used prior to January 1, 1984, when the AT&T divestiture of its regional operating companies took effect.
Of the various resulting 1984 spinoffs, only Cincinnati Bell continues to actively use and promote the Bell name and logo, although cessation of using either the Bell name or logo occurred for some of these companies more than a decade after the 1984 break up as part of an acquisition-related rebranding. The others have only used the marks on rare occasions to maintain their trademark rights, even less now that they have adopted names conceived long after divestiture. Examples include Verizon, who still uses the Bell logo on its trucks and payphones, and Qwest, formerly U S West, who licenses the Northwestern Bell name to Unical Enterprises, who makes telephones under the Northwestern Bell name.
In 1984, each company was assigned a set list of names they were allowed to use in combination with the Bell marks. Again, aside from BellSouth and Cincinnati Bell, and to a limited extent SNET, none of these Bell System names are currently in use in the United States. For example, Southwestern Bell used both the Bell name and the circled-bell trademark until renaming itself SBC in 2002. Bell Atlantic used the Bell name and circled-bell trademark until renaming itself Verizon in 2000.
Of the various resulting 1956 spinoffs, only Bell Canada continues to use the Bell name, although cessation of using either the Bell name and circled-bell trademark occurred for some of these companies multiple decades later. For example, for the multiple decades that Nortel was named Northern Telecom, their research and development arm was Bell Northern Research. Bell Canada and its holding-company parent, Bell Canada Enterprises, still use the Bell name and used variations the circled-bell logo until 1977, which until 1976 strongly resembled the 1921 to 1939 Bell System trademark shown above.
Subsidiaries
Prior to the 1984 break-up, the Bell System consisted of the companies listed below. These companies were made separate from AT&T in 1984, except as noted. Due to the 1984 break-up, the regional Bell operating companies (RBOCs) that were formed out of many formerly separate regional operating companies were: BellSouth, US West, Southwestern Bell, Pacific Telesis, Ameritech, NYNEX, and Bell Atlantic. The formal term RBOC referring specifically to these seven corporations appeared as part of the 1984 break-up of the Bell System; the term regional operating company was in use in the Bell System prior to the 1984 break-up as referring to the smaller LECs that were wholly or partially owned by AT&T. In addition to the regional operating companies that were merged to form the seven RBOCs, Cincinnati Bell and SNET were also regional operating companies considered part of the Bell System prior to 1984. Also, in 1983, the National Exchange Carrier Association, Inc. (NECA) was formed by the FCC and various Bell System companies to perform telephone industry tariff filings and revenue distributions following the 1984 breakup. The NECA was staffed with former employees of Bell-System-affiliated companies. The former operating companies of the Bell System listed below are organized according to the current owners of the companies (or their successors).
- Cincinnati Bell, Inc., a currently-existing regional operating company of which AT&T owned a minority interest in 1984 and thus was left separate in by 1984 break-up
- Cincinnati Bell Telephone
- Qwest Communications International, a currently-existing holding company
- US West, a former RBOC holding company
- The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Company, a former regional LEC, more commonly known as Mountain Bell
- Pacific Northwest Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- Northwestern Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- US West, a former RBOC holding company
- AT&T, Inc, a currently-existing holding company
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SBC Communications, Inc., AT&T Inc.'s former corporate name
- Ameritech, a former RBOC holding company
- Illinois Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- Indiana Bell Telephone Company, Inc., a former regional LEC
- Michigan Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- The Ohio Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- Wisconsin Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- Pacific Telesis, a former RBOC holding company
- Bell Telephone Company of Nevada, a former regional LEC
- The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Company, a former regional LEC
- Southern New England Telecommunications Corp., a former regional operating company of which AT&T owned a minority interest in 1984 and thus was left separate by the 1984 break-up
- Southern New England Telephone Company
- Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- Ameritech, a former RBOC holding company
- AT&T Corporation
- AT&T Communications (Long Lines until 1984), the inter-operating-company routing unit
- AT&T Labs, once a portion of Bell Labs
- BellSouth Corporation, a currently-existing holding company pending merger with AT&T
- South Central Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company, a former regional LEC
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SBC Communications, Inc., AT&T Inc.'s former corporate name
- Verizon Communications, a currently-existing holding company
- Bell Atlantic, Verizon's former corporate name
- The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, a former regional LEC
- The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Maryland, a former regional LEC
- The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of Virginia, a former regional LEC
- The Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company of West Virginia, a former regional LEC
- The Diamond State Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- New Jersey Bell Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- NYNEX, a former RBOC holding company
- New England Telephone and Telegraph Company, a former regional LEC
- The New York Telephone Company, a former regional LEC
- Bell Atlantic, Verizon's former corporate name
- Lucent Technologies, a currently-existing research company spun off separately in 1995
- Western Electric, a former telecommunications and recording equipment-manufacturing company that ceased to have that name as of the 1984 break-up
- Bell Labs, the former AT&T-corporate research unit
- Avaya, a currently-existing equipment manufacturing company spun off from Lucent in 2000
- Telcordia Technologies, a currently-existing research company
- Bell Communications Research (BELLCORE), the former regional operating companies' research unit
Prior to the 1956 break-up, the Bell System also included the companies listed below. Bell Canada, Northern Electric, and the Caribbean regional operating companies were considered part of the Bell System proper prior to the 1956 break-up. Nippon Electric was considered a more distant affiliate of Western Electric than Northern Electric, where Nippon Electric via its own research and development adapted the designs of Western Electric's North American telecommunications equipment for use in Japan, which to this day gives much of Japan's telephone equipment and network a closer resemblance to North American ANSI and Telcordia standards than to European-originated ITU-T standards. Prior to the 1956 break-up, Northern Electric was predominantly focused only on manufacturing without any significant amount of separate telecommunication-equipment research & development of its own. The post-WWII-occupation operation of NTT was considered an administrative adjunct to the North American Bell System.
- Bell Canada Enterprises, Inc., a currently-existing regional operating company
- Bell Canada, a current LEC
- Nortel Networks Corporation, formerly Northern Telecom, a currently-existing equipment-manufacturing company
- Northern Electric, a former telecommunications equipment-manufacturing subsidiary of Western Electric
- Dominion Electric, a former recording equipment-manufacturing company
- various former Caribbean regional operating companies, sold to ITT
- NEC, a currently-existing equipment-manufacturing company in Japan
- Nippon Electric, a former telecommunications equipment-manufacturing company 54% owned by Western Electric
- NTT, a currently-existing telecommunications company in Japan that was administered by AT&T as part of General Douglas MacArthur's post-WWII reconstruction
Operating Company logos
The following is a growing collection of Bell Operating Company logos in their 1969-present forms. It also shows the various positioning schemes (Bell symbol to the left, top left, top centered, etc.), and colors used by the various companies after divestiture. Prior to divestiture, usually the Bell symbol was blue and the logotype black, like the AT&T logo to this day, or completely black for single color applications. Also, in the early 90s Bell Atlantic and U S West changed to a different, bolder font, as can be seen below in the C&P Telephone and the Mountain Bell logos.