This is fairly easy: Just run a pair of wires from one phone to the other. One to carry the electrons out, and the other for the electrons to return--you have to have both to have a working circuit! This is just what Alexander Graham Bell did; he had one phone in his office and the other in Watson's workshop. They could talk back and forth, with no one interrupting. No batteries or other power source was necessary -- the telephones operated on the electricity generated by the receiver/transmitter diaphragm moving under the influence of the speaker's sound waves. But sound quality wasn't very good, and it certainly wasn't very powerful!
In 1876, Bell did some further experiments outside, using stovepipe wire nailed to a fence as the conductors. This was the first, but certainly not the last, time that anyone used an "iron-wire" line. It worked well enough to prove the point over a quarter-mile transmission path and it was used extensively in the many private telephone companies well into the twentieth century. He then borrowed an existing telegraph circuit that was installed properly on a pole line and talked, first over a one-way path of eight miles, and then over a 16-mile path in 1877.
How to Connect More Than Two Telephones Together
This isn't at all difficult, either...not as long as you don't mind having everyone able to talk and to listen in at the same time! It's called a party line, and many communities were set up this way, with ten or more parties all on one line. By now, the telephone engineers had figured out that you needed some way to tell the distant party that you'd like to speak with them. They installed a ringing generator on the line: This was a device that you'd crank to make a voltage which went down the line and rang a bell at the other end. Of course, with ten people on the line, you needed to have a different set of rings for each person. And, believe it or not, this type of service was still the only thing available in a number of places in the United States into the late 1940s. The Bell System was constantly urged by the US government to take over these multiparty iron-wire telephone companies and upgrade the service to industry standard.
Source : www.moah.org/exhibits/archives/talkingwires.html
In 1876, Bell did some further experiments outside, using stovepipe wire nailed to a fence as the conductors. This was the first, but certainly not the last, time that anyone used an "iron-wire" line. It worked well enough to prove the point over a quarter-mile transmission path and it was used extensively in the many private telephone companies well into the twentieth century. He then borrowed an existing telegraph circuit that was installed properly on a pole line and talked, first over a one-way path of eight miles, and then over a 16-mile path in 1877.
How to Connect More Than Two Telephones Together
This isn't at all difficult, either...not as long as you don't mind having everyone able to talk and to listen in at the same time! It's called a party line, and many communities were set up this way, with ten or more parties all on one line. By now, the telephone engineers had figured out that you needed some way to tell the distant party that you'd like to speak with them. They installed a ringing generator on the line: This was a device that you'd crank to make a voltage which went down the line and rang a bell at the other end. Of course, with ten people on the line, you needed to have a different set of rings for each person. And, believe it or not, this type of service was still the only thing available in a number of places in the United States into the late 1940s. The Bell System was constantly urged by the US government to take over these multiparty iron-wire telephone companies and upgrade the service to industry standard.
Source : www.moah.org/exhibits/archives/talkingwires.html