Philadelphia City Council Recognizes May 7, 2026, “Alexander Graham Bell and AT&T Day in the City of Philadelphia”
Philadelphia City Council Recognizes May 7, 2026, “Alexander Graham Bell and AT&T Day in the City of Philadelphia”
The Philadelphia City Council issued a resolution recognizing May 7, 2026, as “Alexander Graham Bell and AT&T Day” in the City of Philadelphia on the occasion of the 150th Anniversary of the first successful phone call and the ultimate founding of AT&T, as well as the first broad public demonstration of the telephone later that year at the Centennial World’s Fair in the City of Philadelphia.
I was proud to join my colleagues, Sadia Walker and Corey Alston, two AT&T employees from the Philadelphia area, to accept the resolution during a Philadelphia City Council meeting today.
Alexander Graham Bell made the first telephone call on March 10, 1876, and formed Bell Telephone Company, which became American Telephone & Telegraph – today’s modern AT&T.
Building on the legacy of Bell’s first phone call 150 years ago, AT&T is reaffirming its
leadership as the company driving America’s connected economy so every community,
family, and business can participate in the promise of American progress.
Last month, we announced an investment and spend of more than $250 billion in the future of U.S. advanced connectivity, building the high-speed networks and resilience required for the next era of innovation and economic growth. Learn more about this planned investment here.
Here’s the resolution. You also can find it online here.
WHEREAS, Whether in government, commerce, or public safety, one thing has been essential through every era of progress: the ability to communicate quickly, clearly, and reliably; and
WHEREAS, On March 10, 2026, AT&T marked the 150th Anniversary of the first successful telephone call – a breakthrough that changed how people connect across distance and strengthened communities and accelerated economic and civic life; and
WHEREAS, In 1876, at America’s first official World’s Fair, the Centennial Exposition in
Philadelphia, Alexander Graham Bell demonstrated his invention, the telephone; and
WHEREAS, On November 14, 1878, the first commercial telephone exchange in the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania opened in Philadelphia through the Bell Telephone Company, bringing a new kind of connection to homes, businesses, and institutions; and
WHEREAS, As communications evolved, Philadelphia remained central to its expansion. On October 1, 1930, the first interstate connection for the police teletypewriter network opened between New York City, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, improving cross-state coordination and helping law enforcement share critical information faster and more reliably; and
WHEREAS, On October 1, 1948, a long-distance coaxial telephone cable linked Philadelphia through Pittsburgh to Cleveland, adding long-distance telephone circuits, and significantly expanding national communications capacity. Constructed through the joint efforts of the Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania, the Ohio Bell Telephone Company, and the AT&T Long Lines Department, this project underscored Philadelphia’s role as a vital hub in the nation’s communications network; and
WHEREAS, As we recognize this 150-year milestone, we also honor the workers and innovators who made these advancements possible: the engineers, technicians, operators, and public-safety professionals whose skill and dedication have helped keep people connected when it matters most; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED, THAT THE COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, Hereby recognizes May 7, 2026, as Alexander Graham Bell and AT&T Day in the City of Philadelphia, marking the 150th Anniversary of the first successful phone call and the ultimate founding of AT&T, as well as the first broad public demonstration of the telephone later that year at the Centennial World’s Fair.
FURTHER RESOLVED, That an Engrossed copy of this resolution be presented to Sadia Walker and Corey Alston of AT&T as evidence of the gratitude and sincere admiration of this legislative body.