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The Phone Booth Stuffing craze of the 1950’s

Twenty-two students cramming into telephone booth at St. Mary’s College, Moraga, California

Why stuff people into a phone booth? Just because.

Phone booth stuffing

In early 1959, twenty-five students attempted something nobody had ever tried before. The South African students of Durban tried to see if all twenty-five people could fit into a phone booth. They succeeded and submitted their achievement to the Guinness Book of World Records. Soon, others heard about the bizarre stunt and attempts at phone booth stuffing (or cramming) began all over the world.

From Telephone booth squash in England to phone booth stuffing in California

Twenty-two students tumble out of a telephone booth after stuffing

The phone booth stuffing fad travelled first to England where it was known as the “telephone booth squash”. In the UK, they managed to cram nineteen students into a single phone booth.

In the spring of 1959, the phone booth stuffing craze took off in California and slowly spread eastward during the summer of that same year. At UCLA, seventeen men squeezed into a seven-foot-high phone booth. Shortly after, eighteen men crammed into a phone booth at St. Mary’s University in Moraga, California. MIT students managed to stuff nineteen students into a booth. The bizarre fad was featured in newspapers and newscasts throughout the country while the general public scratched their heads in amusement.

Phone booth records are smashed, and cheaters banned as new rules are introduced to govern the “sport”

Phone booth stuffing

At Modesto Junior College the phone booth stuffing record set by the South African students of Durban was smashed. Modesto students managed to fit thirty-four students into a phone booth. Shortly thereafter, the record was smashed again after a Canadian school stuffed forty into a booth. Eyebrows raised and an investigation was launched to see if they cheated.

After the investigation, the record was thrown out when, as suspected, it was discovered that an extra-large phone booth had been used and it had been turned on its side to make it easier to stack people into the booth. As a result, official rules were created that specified the phone booth had to be a standard sized booth and had to remain upright. In addition, it was ruled that a person only counted if at least half of their body was inside the booth. In England, the rules were expanded, and it was required that an actual phone call was placed or received from inside the stuffed phone booth.

The fad continued to gain steam with students skipping classes to plan their phone booth stuffing event. Some phone booth stuffers dieted beforehand, and some worked on various stacking techniques (such as the “crosshatch” stacking method that was used to set the St. Mary’s College record).

As quickly as the fad took off, it disappeared, ending in the summer of 1959. The South African record of twenty-five people stuffed into a booth has never been broken.

Phone booth stuffing sideways method

Image Credits

In-Article Image Credits

Twenty-two students cramming into telephone booth at St. Mary’s College, Moraga, California via Fans in a Flashbulb with usage type - Public Domain. 1959
Phone booth stuffing via Whatever Mitch by Life Magazine with usage type - Public Domain
Twenty-two students tumble out of a telephone booth after stuffing via Whatever Mitch with usage type - Public Domain
Phone booth stuffing via History Collection with usage type - Public Domain
Phone booth stuffing sideways method via I Don't Get It with usage type - Public Domain

Featured Image Credit

Twenty-two students cramming into telephone booth at St. Mary’s College, Moraga, California via Fans in a Flashbulb with usage type - Public Domain. 1959

 

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