Area codes 201 and 551

Map of area code 201

Area codes 201 and 551 are the North American telephone area code for the state of New Jersey covering most of Hudson and Bergen counties. Major cities in the area code include Bayonne, Jersey City, Hoboken, Hackensack, Secaucus, Englewood and Englewood Cliffs. 201 is the historical area code, first established, while 551 is an overlay covering the same area.

201 was the first original area code when AT&T devised the North American Numbering Plan in 1947. It originally covered the entire state of New Jersey.[1][2]

The decision to assign only one area code to New Jersey at the outset was unusual. Not only was it the most densely populated state in the country, but the bulk of its population is concentrated in two very large metropolitan areas--the suburbs of New York City in the northeast and the suburbs of Philadelphia in the southwest. However, the decision to split a state into multiple numbering plan areas was based on the anticipated number of central offices needed for each area code, as each area code could only accommodate ca. 500 offices.[3] In 1958, 201 was restricted to northern New Jersey, when southern New Jersey, including the state capital, Trenton, the southern Jersey Shore and the New Jersey side of the Delaware Valley, was assigned area code 609.[4]

For the next 33 years, area code 201 served Bergen, Hudson, Ocean, Essex, Union, Morris, Passaic, Hunterdon, Somerset, Middlesex, Monmouth, Sussex and Warren counties--a region largely coextensive with the New Jersey side of the New York City area.

As the central region of New Jersey grew during the 1980s, the northeastern section of the state lost sizable portions of its population due to the decline of its major cities, including Newark, Paterson, Clifton, and Elizabeth. On June 8, 1991, area code 908 was split from 201; it primarily serves the north-central regions of the state.[5]

Within four years, 201 was close to exhaustion once again due to the proliferation of cell phones and Internet dial-up connections. The supply of numbers was smaller because the entire northern half of the state is a single LATA, meaning numbers in 908 were not available for use. On June 1, 1997, Essex and Passaic counties, home to Newark and Paterson, respectively, the state's largest and third-largest cities, as well as Morris and Sussex counties, were split as a separate plan area as area code 973.[5][6] This left Hudson and Bergen counties, the two most densely populated counties in the state and the closest to New York City, as the only counties in the 201 plan area.

The 1997 split was intended as a long-term solution. However, demand for new numbers continued in Hudson and Bergen counties, and it was apparent the area would need another area code. Verizon, the dominant telephone company in New Jersey, lobbied for an overlay rather than a split. Overlays were a new concept at the time, and were somewhat controversial because they required implementation of ten-digit dialing. However, Verizon wanted to spare its customers the burden of having to change their numbers.

Area code 551 was created in 2001 to overlay 201, along with area codes 862 and 848, which overlay area codes 973 and 732, respectively.[7] With the implementation of the overlay area code on December 1, 2001, 10-digit dialing became mandatory.

Area code 201 was the first area code in which Direct Distance Dialing (DDD) service became available. In 1951, the first direct-dialed long distance call was made from Englewood, New Jersey to Alameda, California.[2]

See also

References

  1. Now you can call, if your calls don't work some business lines aren't set up to all to new area codes., The Virginian-Pilot, November 1, 1995. Accessed June 8, 2007. "When the first area code, 201, was introduced in New Jersey in 1951, phone-numbering experts thought there would be enough codes with a middle digit of '0' or '1' to last well into the next century."
  2. 1 2 1951: First Direct-Dial Transcontinental Telephone Call, AT&T Inc., accessed May 12, 2007.
  3. AT&T (1955), Notes on Nationwide Dialing
  4. About Verizon New Jersey: Years 1931 to 1969, Verizon Communications, accessed May 12, 2007.
  5. 1 2 About Verizon New Jersey: Years 1985 to 1998, Verizon Communications, accessed May 12, 2007.
  6. Newman, Andy. "New Area Codes Introduced", The New York Times, June 2, 1997. Accessed January 23, 2008.
  7. McKay, Martha. "New Jersey Assigned New Area Codes.", The Record (Bergen County), April 18, 2001. Accessed August 11, 2001. "The new New Jersey area codes -- 551, 356, and 848 -- were announced this week and will be introduced next year in the regions currently served by 201, 973, and 732, respectively."

External links

New Jersey area codes: 201, 551, 609, 732, 848, 856, 862, 908, 973
North: 845
West: 862/973 201/551 East: 212/646, 347/718, 914, 917
South: 347/718, 917
New York area codes: 212, 315, 347, 516, 518, 585, 607, 631, 646, 716, 718, 845, 914, 917, 929

Coordinates: 40°52′04″N 74°26′16″W / 40.8678°N 74.4379°W / 40.8678; -74.4379

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