Books, Journals, & Magazines
(#A1) Harrison, James. “A History of the Kinloch Telephone Company (A Reprint of a 1933 Monograph).” Telecom History 1 (1994): 95-101.
(#A2) Harrison, James. History of the Kinloch Telephone System. St. Louis, 1933.
(#A3) “The Kinloch Telephone Company.” The St. Louis Electrical Handbook; Being a Guide for Visitors from Abroad Attending the International Electrical Congress, St. Louis, Mo., September, 1904. St. Louis: Pub. under the Auspices of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, 1904. 247-51.
(#A4) Bausch, Frederick. “The Kinloch Telephone Exchange, of St. Louis, Mo.”Electrical World and Engineer. 35.1 (1900): 5-13. (Digitized: Google Books)
(#A5) Marshall, Cloyd. “Intercommunications on the World’s Fair Grounds.”Electrical World and Engineer. 44 (1904): 73. (Digitized: Google Books)
(#A6) The Telephone Comes to St. Louis. St. Louis: Missouri Historical Society, 1953. Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. Print.
(#A7) “Kinloch Telephone Company’s New Building.” The Telephone Magazine. 26.1 (1905): 108. (Digitized: Google Books)
(#A8) “Telephone Companies.” World’s Fair Souvenir of the Engineers’ Club of Saint Louis. 1904. 63-65. (Digitized: Google Books)
(#A9) “The Telephone World.” Electricity 25.2 (1903): 25. (Digitized: Google Books)
(#A10) Kinloch Long Distance Telephone Co. of Missouri. Rates for Long Distance Telephone Service from St. Louis, Mo., and East St. Louis, Ill. 1904.
(#A11) “Skyscrapers.” St. Louis in the Twentieth Century: A Hundred Years of Progress Illustrated by Over Two Hundred Views. 1904.
(#A12) A Monument to Communication: The Romance of a “Modern Colossus” Built Upon Human Speech. St. Louis, Mo.: Southwestern Bell Telephone, 1926.
(#A13) Cox, James. Notable St. Louisans in 1900; a Portrait Gallery of Men Whose Energy and Ability Have Contributed Largely towards Making St. Louis the Commercial and Financial Metropolis of the West, Southwest and South. St. Louis: Benesch Art, 1900. (Digitized: Google Books)
National Register of Historic Places
(#B1) National Register of Historic Places – Nomination Form: McKinley Fox District. (PDF)
(#B2) National Register of Historic Places – Nomination Form: Farm and Home Savings and Loan Association. (PDF)
(#B3) National Register of Historic Places – Nomination Form: Beaumont Telephone Exchange. (PDF)
Newspaper Articles
(#C1) Marion, Rose, Fred R. Mott, and H. Linton Reber. “The Cradle and Grave of the St. Louis Telephone Girl.” St. Louis Post Dispatch 7 Sept. 1902.
(#C2) “Society the Spoils of War of Two Giant Telephone Concerns.” St. Louis Post Dispatch 12 Nov. 1906.
(#C3) “Kinloch Still Tied Up On Second Day of Strike.” St. Louis Post Dispatch 27 June 1919.
Postcards
(#D1) Century Building, St. Louis, MO. Published by V. O. Hammon Publishing Company, Chicago, IL. Circa 1907-1915.
(#D2) Bell Telephone Building, St. Louis, MO. Published by E. C. Kropp Company, Milwaukee, WI. 1933.