The company Mastertel
opened a Telephone History Museum which is located at the company's
headquaters in Moscow. Telephones of different world leading telephone
producers of 1876-1970 are exhibited there. A rare collection of
domestic telephones is also shown there.

A Bell desk telephone, 1890, USA.

An L. M. Ericsson (Lars Magnus Ericsson) telephone, 1895, Sweden. This telephone with an inductor call became the company's trademark. The common people called it skeleton-telephone. It was widely used in Europe (including Russia) and in the United States, at social infractructure facilities and in apartments.


A Siemens desk telephone, 1878, Germany. This telephone was made of wood and was simultaneously used as a microphone and a receiver. When one of the interlocutors was speaking, the other one had to keep silent. The two of them could not speak at the same time. At first the telephone had no ring. It was used by German postal authorities.





















A Bell desk telephone, 1890, USA.
An L. M. Ericsson (Lars Magnus Ericsson) telephone, 1895, Sweden. This telephone with an inductor call became the company's trademark. The common people called it skeleton-telephone. It was widely used in Europe (including Russia) and in the United States, at social infractructure facilities and in apartments.
A Siemens desk telephone, 1878, Germany. This telephone was made of wood and was simultaneously used as a microphone and a receiver. When one of the interlocutors was speaking, the other one had to keep silent. The two of them could not speak at the same time. At first the telephone had no ring. It was used by German postal authorities.