Area codes 732 and 848

Area codes 732 and 848 are telephone area codes in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for parts of the U.S. state of New Jersey.

Numbering plan areas and area codes of New Jersey

History

In the original configuration of the first nationwide telephone numbering plan of 1947, all of New Jersey was a single numbering plan area (NPA), assigned the first of all area codes, 201. By 1959, it was split to create a second numbering plan area, 609.[1] This division generally followed the dividing line between North Jersey, proximate to New York City, and South Jersey, proximate to Philadelphia and the Jersey Shore. [2] Despite the division into two numbering plan areas, all calls within the state of New Jersey were dialed without area codes until July 21, 1963.[3][4][5]

This configuration of two area code in New Jersey remained in place for c. 33 years, until 1991, when the 201 numbering plan area was further divided to create area code 908 in its southern half. This made available more central office prefixes in the northern part, comprising the densely populated western suburbs of New York City, as well as in the Newark, NJ area, which fell into NPA 908.

On June 1, 1997, services growth in numbering plan area 908 required splitting the area with a new area code 732 assigned to its southeastern half, along the Atlantic seaboard.[6] Ten-digit dialing became mandatory on December 6 of that year. The area includes Middlesex, Somerset, and Union counties in Northern and Central New Jersey, and Monmouth and northern Ocean counties on the New Jersey Shore.

The assignment of area code 848 to the same numbering plan area in 2001 created an overlay complex for this region, after the pool of 732-numbers began to exhaust rapidly.[7]

The area of 732/848, other than Union County, generally defines the Central New Jersey region while 609/640/856 and Area code 908/201/551/862/973 generally mark Southern New Jersey and Northern New Jersey, respectively.

See also

References

  1. Sinks, William A. (Winter 1959). "New Numbers for Tomorrow's Telephones". Bell Telephone Monthly. 38 (4): 6.
  2. Demasters, Karen. "The New Phone Math: 609 Divided by 2", The New York Times,1999-02-07. Accessed 2008-08-06.
  3. "Area Code Stickers To Go On 'Phones". Hackettstown, NJ: The Hackettstown Gazette. 1961-07-06. p. 3.
  4. Nationwide Direct Distance Dialing (company guide). New Jersey Bell. 1961-03-26. p. 2.
  5. "New Jersey Bell customers will begin using area codes". Redbank Register. 1963-06-20.
  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 [2002, as of this writing] in the regions currently served by 201, 973, and 732, respectively." "New Jersey Assigned New Area Codes. (18-APR-01) the Record (Hackensack, New Jersey) (Via Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business News)". Archived from the original on December 1, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
New Jersey area codes: 201/551, 609/640, 732/848, 856, 862/973, 908
North: 908
West: 609/640, 908 732/848 East: 718/347/929/917, Atlantic Ocean
South: 609/640
New York area codes: 212/332/646, 315/680, 347/718/929, 363/516, 518/838, 585, 607, 631/934, 624/716, 329/845, 914, 917

40.1839°N 74.0370°W / 40.1839; -74.0370

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