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What did families do in America before 911 existed? This video explores the forgotten reality of medical emergencies and death at home before the first 911 call on February 16, 1968, in Haleyville, Alabama. Long before modern EMS, paramedics, and rapid emergency response, families often had no universal number to call when someone collapsed, had a heart attack, or was dying. In rural towns and big cities alike, emergency help depended on phone books, operators, local doctors, neighbors, and luck. Using historical examples from the 1950s and 1960s, this documentary-style story breaks down how emergency care worked before 911, why the system was so fragmented, and how that delay in care regularly cost lives. It covers the role of funeral homes as ambulance services, the impact of the 1966 National Academy of Sciences report Accidental Death and Disability, the rise of modern paramedics in 1969, and the cultural shift that moved death from the home into hospitals. It also examines how families once handled dying relatives themselves—caring for them, recognizing the signs of death, and managing the final moments without professional intervention. This is a history of 911, emergency medical services, prehospital care, and American family life—but it’s also a deeper look at what modern society gained and what it lost. If you’re interested in American history, medical history, EMS history, death and dying, healthcare evolution, and how life changed before and after 1968, this video gives a powerful perspective on a world that disappeared within one generation. Subscribe to my channel 👉 @TheUnofficialTimeline #911history #americanhistory #medicalhistory #emshistory #paramedics #emergencyservices #deathanddying #historydocumentary #prehospitalcare #1960shistory