There’s a Secret Spot in My Hallway I Never Noticed Until Today
When I moved into my 1940s home, I noticed a peculiar little nook in the hallway—only a few feet high with a peaked top. Too small for shelves, too awkward for décor, it sat empty for months, silently puzzling me.Then, by chance, I found a photo on a vintage home forum showing the exact same niche—holding a rotary phone. Suddenly it clicked: it was a telephone nook, a built-in space from an era when phones stayed put.
Back When Phones Stayed Still
Long before cordless phones and smartphones, families shared one landline, often placed in the hallway. These little niches acted as communication hubs—complete with a tiny shelf, a notepad, and sometimes a lamp. Teens whispered secrets there, parents copied grocery lists, and everyone took turns answering calls.