
Transatlantic Phone Decoration
Velvet Churchill War Rooms black telephone with green handheld piece hanging decoration with gold trim.
Designed by IWM
This product was designed in London and handmade in India by a fairtrade charity that supports women through providing local work at home.
Updated telephone decoration featuring the scrambler phone at Churchill War Rooms which was used as Winston Churchill's top secret hotline to the President of the United States at the time. During the Second World War, many scrambler systems were installed to prevent accidental or intentional eavesdropping. Initially, the public telephone network was used for this, but the War Office later established its own private network, that was completely independent from public exchanges.
Transatlantic Phone Decoration
Velvet Churchill War Rooms black telephone with green handheld piece hanging decoration with gold trim.
Designed by IWM
This product was designed in London and handmade in India by a fairtrade charity that supports women through providing local work at home.
Updated telephone decoration featuring the scrambler phone at Churchill War Rooms which was used as Winston Churchill's top secret hotline to the President of the United States at the time. During the Second World War, many scrambler systems were installed to prevent accidental or intentional eavesdropping. Initially, the public telephone network was used for this, but the War Office later established its own private network, that was completely independent from public exchanges.
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Description
Velvet Churchill War Rooms black telephone with green handheld piece hanging decoration with gold trim.
Designed by IWM
This product was designed in London and handmade in India by a fairtrade charity that supports women through providing local work at home.
Updated telephone decoration featuring the scrambler phone at Churchill War Rooms which was used as Winston Churchill's top secret hotline to the President of the United States at the time. During the Second World War, many scrambler systems were installed to prevent accidental or intentional eavesdropping. Initially, the public telephone network was used for this, but the War Office later established its own private network, that was completely independent from public exchanges.






















