While regarded now largely as a provider of breakdown assistance and motor insurance, the Automobile Association had a wider remit in the past. It installed signs to direct motorists and warn them of hazards. And in the 1920s, it got into the telephone business in the UK and the newly-independent Irish Free State.

An AA-provided directional sign, believed to date from about 1939, pointing the way to Rineanna airfield, now Shannon Aiport

The AA began to install phone boxes which members could use to summon help in the event of a breakdown. While connected to the regular telephone system, they were not public telephones and had to be unlocked with a key which was issued by the AA to its members. There was no coinbox mechanism – members could make a local call for free, but for other calls they were expected to leave the appropriate amount in an ‘honesty box’1 or reverse the charges. In the days when all trunk and – in many places, local – calls were connected by an operator, this was pretty easy to monitor.

The network was extended to Ireland in 1927, with the first roadside boxes being installed in Carryduff, outside Belfast and Shankill, Co. Dublin. In addition to a telephone, the boxes displayed the phone numbers and addresses of the local doctor, police station, approved hotels and garages. They also contained, at different periods, first-aid kits, fire extinguishers and touring maps.

Belfast Newsletter, 15 October 1927

Within a few weeks, the Irish Independent was reporting that ‘Extensive use has been made by motorists of the roadside telephone stations… and the number of calls registered indicates that this latest addition to the amenities of the road fills a long felt want2.

In a 1949 review of the AA’s members’ Handbook, the Cork Examiner mourned that the association’s …’telephone boxes are not as general in Ireland as in the other island, but there are several on important routes and junctions3.

The network in Ireland was expanded in the early 50s so that by 1954, there were over 12 roadside boxes with a stated aim of reaching 204. In the end, the network grew to about 34 boxes across the island, split equally between the two jurisdictions5. It was a pretty meagre number, representing less than 4% of the total network of 862 boxes across Great Britain, both parts of Ireland, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands.

Waterford News and Star, 10 September 1954

The heyday of the AA roadside telephone box was the late 50s and early 60s. By the late 1960s some were being removed6, though members were still issued with keys.

As a child I was fascinated by the key on my dad’s keyring with the AA logo on its diamond-shaped bow. My father explained how it could be used to open one of these boxes, but we never seemed to see one on our travels from Dublin, which makes me think that many had been removed by the late 1960s. I remember some excitement when we finally spotted one, I think, on the old N1 at Blakes Cross, probably box 648 on the list below.

One reason for their removal was the expansion of the public telephone network which made the AA telephones increasingly redundant. The growing motorway network, with its own emergency telephone system, removed traffic from the roads provided with AA boxes.

The death-knell was sounded by the arrival of the mobile phone as a mass product in the 1990s. The AA decommissioned its last remaining boxes in the UK in 2002; it is likely that the last boxes in Ireland were removed well before that.

Quietly and unmourned, the AA’s contribution to telecommunications history draw to a close.

For more about the history of telecommunications in Ireland, check out my other blog posts.

List of AA telephone boxes in Ireland

Box NoNameTelephone No. Location InstalledNotes
?CarryduffUnknownNear the junction of the A24 and A71927
643Killeen Newry 2500 Newry – Dundalk A.1 / 3 miles from Newry   
644Ballcarry Whitehead 2232 Belfast – Larne A.2 / 1 3/4 miles northwest of Whitehead 1928
645Loughbrickland Banbridge 2116 Newry – Banbridge A.1 / 3miles south of Banbridge 1930 8 Preserved at the Ulster Folk and Transport Museum
646Culcrum Cloughmills 209 Ballymena – Ballymoney A.26 / Ballycastle A.44 1930 8
647Shankill Bray 2644 Dublin – Bray T.7 / Dalkey T.44 / 1 3/4 miles north of Bray 1927Removed in late 1960s6
648Dawsbridge Swords 203 Dublin – Drogheda T.1 / Skerries L.90   
649Dunkettle Glanmire 44 Cork – Fermoy T.6 / Midleton T.12   
671Roughfort Glengormley 316 Belfast – Antrim A.6 / Roughfort – Ballycraigy (Unclass) 1952 9
672Drumgor Lurgan 3104 Lurgan – Portadown A.3 / 2 1/2 miles northeast of Portadown 1952 9
673Fivemiletown Fivemiletown 232 Clogher – Fivemiletown A.4 / 1 mile east of Fivemiletown 19529
674Ballykelly Limavady 207 Limavady – Londonderry A.2 / 4 1/2 miles west of Limavady 1952 10
675Damhead Coleraine 2596 Coleraine – Ballymoney A.26 / 220 yds. southeast of Loughan – Ballybogey (Unclass) / 3 1/2 miles southeast of Coleraine   
676Tullyhinan Banbridge 2280 Banbridge 2280 – Dronmore A.1 / 2 1/2 miles northeast of Bandridge 1952
690Killcullen Kilcullen 41 Naas – Athy T.6 / Carlow T.51   
691Curragh Curragh 69 Naas – Kildare T.5 3 3/4 miles east of Kildare   
692Cahir Cahir 273 Cahir – Mitchelstown T.6 / 3 miles southwest of Cahir   
693Coachford Coachford 33 Cork – Macroom T.29 / 2 miles west of Coachford   
694Patrickswell Patrickswell Limerick – Mallow T.11 / Limerick – Tralee T.28 / 6 1/2 miles southwest of Limerick   
695Meeting-of-the-Waters Avoca 30 Rathdrum – Arklow / 2 1/4 miles from Avoca / 4 1/4 miles from Woodenbridge  Removed in late 1960s6
696Dungarvan Dungarvan 143 Waterford – Dungarvan T.12 / Lismore T.30   
697Mullins Cross Dunleer 35 Drogheda – Dundalk T.1 / South of Junction Mansfieldtown (Unclass)   
698Dunboyne Donboyne 261 Dublin – Navan T.35 / 170 yds. from Dunboyne junction into Meath / 1 mile from Dunboyne / 8 miles from Dunshaughlin   
699Moate Moate 39 Moate – Kilbeggan / 1.9 miles east Moate T.4   
700Rathcoole Rathcoole 289247 Dublin – Naas T.5 / 3/4 mile from Rathcoole   
701Collooney Collooney 24 Boyle – Collooney T.3 / 1 mile approx. south of Collooney at Toberscanavan   
768Verner’s Bridge Anaghmore 274 Portadown – Dungannon A.4 / Maghery B.196   
769Springwell Coleraine 3576 Coleraine / Limavady A.37 / 7/3/4 miles southwest of Coleraine   
790Beltony Newtownstewart 287 Omagh – Newtownstewart A.5 / 3 miles Newtownstewart   
791Bready Londonderry 3879 Londonderry – Strabane A.5 / 6 1/2 miles southwest of Londonderry   
851Leixlip Lucan 231 Dublin – Galway T.3 / 1/2 mile west of Leixlip   
881Binmore Derrygonnelly 249 Enniskillen – Belleek A.46 . 12 miles northwest of Enniskillen   
909Merlin Park Galway 4438 Galway – Dublin / 9 miles from Athenry / 18 1/4 miles from Louch Ben   
914Glenshane Pass Dungiven 289 Maghera – Dungiven A.6 / 6 1/2 miles from Maghera / 6 1/2 miles from Dungiven   
Extracted from AA Roadside Telephone Boxes and other sources as noted.

References

1 Belfast Newsletter, 15 October 1927

2 Irish Independent, 11 November 1927

3 Cork Examiner, 12 May 1949

4 Waterford News and Star, 10 September 1954

5 AA Roadside Telephone Boxes

6 Wicklow People, 30 December 1999

7 Londonderry Sentinel, 01 May 1928

8 Belfast Newsletter, 07 August 1930

9 Belfast Telegraph, 01 February 1952

10 Londonderry Sentinel, 01 April 1952


2 thoughts on “Before AA Roadwatch came AA Telephones

  1. Hi, am trying to find info on AA box at Kilmacthomas Co. Waterford on main road(N25). Had seen this sentry box on numerous occasions as a youngster, late 60’s early 70s. It was on right hand side of road heading for Dungarvan. Do not recall number. Do not know when it was removed. Any info would be greatly appreciated. Thank You

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    1. Hi Brian,
      Thanks for your comment.
      Could this have been box 696, described as “Dungarvan: Waterford – Dungarvan T.12 / Lismore T.30” ? I think this would have been on the Waterford side of Dungarvan where the N72 braches off the N25, though this is further west than where you describe.
      Deryck

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