Twelve million people a year still dial 123. They are paying thirty-odd pence for a courtesy that every device in their pocket performs for free, with greater accuracy, without billing them, and without the small ritual of holding a handset to the ear. Yet the calls keep coming. They spike on Remembrance Day. They spike on New Year's Eve. They spike on the two Sundays a year when the clocks change, as if a watch needs absolution from a more authoritative source before it can be trusted again.
The British speaking clock launched on the 24th of July 1936. Its first voice was a London telephonist called Ethel Jane Cain, who won a General Post Office competition and ten guineas for the job. The original machine was the size of a small room, all motors and glass discs and photocells and valves, her voice etched optically onto the glass like a film soundtrack. To reach her you dialled TIM, which spelled itself as 846 on the alphabetical Director-system dials of London, Birmingham, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool and Manchester. Other parts of the country dialled 952, then 80, then 8081, and only in the early 1990s was the number flattened to 123 everywhere.
Cain was followed by Pat Simmons in 1963, then Brian Cobby in 1985 (the same Brian Cobby who counted in the Thunderbirds opening, which is the kind of fact that sounds invented), then Sara Mendes da Costa in 2007. Four voices in ninety years. Each one is still out there, archived on retired machines at the British Horological Institute in Nottinghamshire, the way a body is preserved at a state funeral that nobody attends.
What I find strange is not that the service exists. Public infrastructure outlasts its purpose all the time. The strange thing is that anyone is still using it. The phone in my hand keeps time to within milliseconds of an atomic clock. Big Ben itself is now synchronised to BT's service, which means the speaking clock and Big Ben are two outputs of the same hidden reference, performing the same fact in different theatres. The building tells one audience. The voice tells another.
I think part of the answer is that a digital readout never asks anything of you. It is just there, glanced at, gone. Dialling 123 is a small commitment. You decide the time matters enough to ring for it, you wait through the preamble, you listen for three beeps and align your watch to the third one. That ritual produces a different relationship to the second than a screen ever does. Younger people mostly do not know what 123 is for. They will glance at a phone and laugh, in the way people laugh at the inexplicable. The laugh is fine. It does not change the calls.
There is something specific about the word stroke as well. The clock does not say tone. It says stroke, which is the word a grandfather clock makes when it announces an hour, the word a public bell uses when the village still has one. The speaking clock kept the vocabulary of the church clock and the parlour mantel, and ported them into the copper wires of a telephone exchange in 1936, and from there into BT's millisecond-accurate reference oscillator in 2026. The technology has been replaced four times. The word has not.
That is the part I keep turning over. We have a service that does nothing a wristwatch cannot do. It charges thirty-one pence a call. It is voiced by a woman in Brighton who recorded her lines in 2007. And tomorrow morning, when the clocks have been changed an hour or so before anyone gets up, twelve million people across a year will pick up landlines they barely use for anything else, and listen politely until the third beep, and put the phone down satisfied. The line they rang is older than nearly all of them. The voice on it is going nowhere.
Sources:
-
A brief history of the British Speaking Clock — Radio Times
-
Speaking Clock — Wikipedia
-
History of the Speaking Clock — British Telephones
-
Speaking Clock: Why are people still dialling for the time? — BBC News
-
At the third stroke – the speaking clock will have a new voice — The Guardian