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11 comments to "The Mojave Phone Booth: The Loneliest Phone Booth in the World"

  • Dan Smith
    March 6th, 2008 at 4:10 am

    I tried to call…it didn’t work :(

  • hiller goodspeed
    March 6th, 2008 at 10:07 am

    I believe that this was the inspiration for a Pete and Pete episode, at least part of one. There was a phone that had been ringing for decades on the outskirts of town, but everyone was too afraid to answer it (until one day…).

  • Dan Smith
    March 6th, 2008 at 12:29 pm

    oh the existential ponderings of a boy named pete and his brother pete.

  • Jen
    March 6th, 2008 at 1:05 pm

    The phone lives on at Burning Man

  • Paul
    March 6th, 2008 at 2:36 pm

    I would have for sure called if it was still working.

  • Joel
    March 6th, 2008 at 3:46 pm

    Wow, I used to have a 760 number and my parents still live in that desert. Why did I never hear about this?

  • R. Richard Hobbs
    March 6th, 2008 at 8:50 pm

    This Flickr photo states the National Park Service ripped out the phone booth in 2001:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/eyetwist/55062664/
    Nice photo of the phone booth too :-)

  • Doc
    March 6th, 2008 at 11:15 pm

    Hola. Doc here, from Deuce of Clubs.

    The _Bathroom Reader_ folks never contacted me before they published their write-up, so I thought I’d set a couple of things straight here, in lieu of going over to Wikipedia and throwing a mild onscreen tantrum at its Mojave Phone Booth entry.

    The phone booth that came to be known as the Mojave Phone Booth was a historical object of longstanding use in the area and, as such, should have been preserved (certainly according to the Historic Sites Act of 1935 (49 Stat. 666; 16 U.S.C. 461-467). One wouldn’t have thought preservation would be an issue in a self-styled “Preserve” such as the Mojave National Preserve. In fact, the greeting from the first issue of the official handout of the newly created “Preserve” claimed that the Preserve “was established to preserve the outstanding natural, cultural, and scenic resources of this very special treasure,” while their website warned all visitors that

    “All plants, animals, rocks, historical objects, buildings, archeological artifacts, and other natural and cultural objects are protected by law. Please do not disturb them in any way, leaving them intact for all visitors to enjoy.”

    Why, then, would the NPS destroy the Booth–and secretly, without public hearings or warning of any kind?

    Many outlets (including, appropriately, the _Bathroom Reader_) have uncritically repeated then-Superintendent Mary Martin’s vague excuse as it appeared in the NPS’s lone public statement on the subject: “increased public traffic had a negative impact on the desert environment.” Mary Martin never offered a shred of proof of this. And it wasn’t “20 to 30 visitors a day”–it was actually 25 to 30 visitors a *week*. So it’s odd that at the same time that the newly arrived NPS in the Mojave was publishing tourist material practically begging people to come and visit the “Preserve,” Commandant Martin decided that, as NBC’s Roger O’Neill sarcastically put it in his report on the NPS’s destruction of the Booth:

    “In other words, despite 1.6 MILLION acres of sand, cactus, Joshua trees, and snakes, too many people — 25 to 30 a week — were tramping way out of their way to answer the phone.”

    Martin knew very well that the reason she gave for destroying the Booth was bullshit (most Booth visitors would in fact clean up the area when they’d visit, and they drove in on established roads that had existed for decades–i.e., they weren’t off-roading), but she kept on with her charade, going so far as accusing me of hauling out the pile of white decorative rocks near the Booth, when those rocks had been there for years & years & everyone who lived out there knew how they’d gotten there.

    (I have my own theory to explain Martin’s single-minded vendetta on the Booth, and it has nothing to do with protecting the desert and everything to do with a bureaucrat covering her ass in the spotlight of all the publicity the Booth was generating, which could prove detrimental to the career of a government flunky who–before the Booth rose to fame–appears to have taken other unilateral and illegal actions against some of the people who had been living in the Mojave since before she herself was old enough to wear baby (jack)boots. We shall get to the bottom of that in due course.)

    Doc

  • rick
    March 7th, 2008 at 2:00 pm

    Way to give it to em doc. I am a huge fan of the bathroom readers and even though it is a corny gift people seem to love them.

  • George Lisenko
    June 23rd, 2008 at 10:54 am

    Hi , I found the phone booth so interesting that I added some pictures to my guestbook, and will add it to my
    top 300 Pictures. I also have a live pay phone in our back yard. George

  • George Lisenko
    June 23rd, 2008 at 11:02 am

    Hi, here is my hobby website http://www.justminivodkas.com on the front page click on the guestbook to see the pic’s and take a moment to sign in if you like Thanks George


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