The Post Office Electrical Engineers' Journal

The Post Office Electrical Engineers' Journal (POEEJ) was a quarterly technical journal published by the Institution of Post Office Electrical Engineers between 1908 and 1982. 74 volumes were published in all.

When Post Office Telecommunications became British Telecom in 1981, shortly before the latter's privatisation, the Institution changed its name to the Institution of British Telecommunications Engineers. Publication of the POEEJ then ceased in favour of a new journal, British Telecommunications Engineering.

The POEEJ documented the development of Britain's telecommunications network throughout most of the 20th century. Special issues marked key events such as the end of World War II,[1] the construction of TAT-1[2] and the introduction of Subscriber trunk dialling.[3]

According to one source, in 1972 the journal had 38,000 readers, of which about 4,500 were not Post Office employees.[4]

See also

References

  1. The Post Office Electrical Engineers' Journal, Vol. 38 No. 4, January 1946
  2. The Post Office Electrical Engineers' Journal, Vol. 49 No. 4, January 1957
  3. The Post Office Electrical Engineers' Journal, Vol. 51 No. 4, January 1959
  4. How the Secret Telephone War Came to Britain. Sunday Times, October 15th 1972.
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