In 1883, a Wyoming printer ran out of white paper and accidentally created the Yellow Pages.
The first classified telephone directory was published on February 21, 1878, by the New Haven District Telephone Company in Connecticut. It listed fifty subscribers, with names and addresses but no phone numbers, because all calls were connected by a switchboard operator.1 A more formal directory followed that November, running to twenty pages with 391 subscribers, advertisements, and short essays explaining the new technology.
Five years later, in 1883, a printer in Cheyenne, Wyoming, ran out of white paper while producing a local telephone directory and substituted yellow stock for the business listings section.2 The color distinction between residential and commercial listings caught on.
In 1886, Reuben H. Donnelley created the first official Yellow Pages directory in Chicago, organizing business listings by category rather than alphabetically by name.3 The innovation was structural. Instead of requiring a customer to know the name of a specific plumber, the directory allowed anyone to find all the plumbers in their area by looking under a single heading. Donnelley had invented a searchable commercial index, sorted by need rather than identity.
The model scaled with the telephone. As phone networks expanded, every regional carrier produced its own Yellow Pages. By the late twentieth century, the directories had become a primary advertising vehicle for small businesses throughout the United States and beyond, with the phrase "Yellow Pages" in use across at least 75 countries.4 AT&T's "Let Your Fingers Do the Walking" campaign, launched in the 1960s, embedded the directory into daily commercial life.
The industry peaked before the internet made it obsolete. In the United Kingdom, Yell announced in 2017 that it would end the printed Yellow Pages entirely, closing a 51-year run.5 By 2011, nearly 70 percent of Americans reported that they rarely or never used a printed phone directory.