Washington DC Voicemail - Voice Mail Services

 

Your complete voice mail service
for only $9.95/mo Flat Rate !

Our Washington DC voice mail services can answer Your  phones, or we'll give you a new Local  or Toll Free  number.

You can listen to your Washington DC voicemail messages over the phone. We'll also deliver them to your email, so you can listen to them over your computer or any Internet devise.

That also means that you can store your voicemail messages forever, forward them to any email address and discard them.

Don't be fooled by competitors. Most require you to use a Toll Free number with their voice mail services. Why? Because it's all they have, and it's how they make their money - Usage! You pay for every minute of every call you receive, and for every minute of every call you make to pick up voice mail messages. At American Voice Mail, a toll free number is your choice.

We have 83 Central Offices throughout the US, providing Local voicemail and phone service to over 4,000 communities.

Look out for competitors who quote a low rate, and then charge you 13 times a year (4 week billing). What's THAT  all about? You sure wouldn't pay your rent that way.

And look out for others who charge a $25.00 set up charge! Wow! Our set up charge is only $5.00, and we have special corporate rates and quantity discounts.

   When we say Flat Rate, we mean Flat Rate.*

Call Today - Start Today

800.347.2861

Are your looking for our Virtual Office?

Customize your Washington DC voice mail by adding:

Call Transfer: Talk to your callers live. With optional free call screening, you'll decide whether to take the call or send it to voice mail. $4.95/mo.*

Automatic Call Distribution: Callers and voicemail messages are distributed equally to employees on a "round robin" basis, whether employees are in the same office or scattered around the world. Add $4.95/mailbox in the ADC group.

Question & Answer: Your  Washington DC voice mailbox can ask questions, record responses and even ask different questions depending on the answers given by your callers. Add $9.95/mo.

Automated Order Taking: By customizing your Question & Answer Voice Mailbox, you can provide your customers with the ability to place orders 24 hours a day. Add $9.95/mo.

Reminder Calls: Your voice mailbox can call you anywhere, anytime and deliver a voicemail message you earlier recorded for yourself.  Even wake up calls.*

Phone Book Listings: Washington DC voice mail phone numbers you get from us can be listed with the phone company, in your name or company name. You'll be listed in Directory Assistance now, and your number will be printed in the next phone book. Rates vary by phone company.

Call Today - Start Today

800.347.2861

Are your looking for our Virtual Office?

 

*Local transfers are free in flat rate areas. In measured areas, local calls are 2.9cpm. Local long distance is 4.9cpm and long distance is 6.9cpm. All services may not be available in all areas.

 

 

History of Washington, DC

Washington, D.C., was built at the start of the nineteenth century with more irony than iron. Not only did a Frenchman design the American capital, but a free black man may have secured the construction of the city, which was to take place in the middle of the two largest slave-holding states in the union, Maryland and Virginia.

Even before President Washington hired the French artist-architect Major Pierre Charles L'Enfant to plan the physical layout of the city, L'Enfant seemed eager to help build the capital of someone else's country; a country he envisioned would grow from thirteen colonies to fifty states and from three million inhabitants to five hundred million citizens, according to Encyclopedia Britannica.

The pattern of radiating avenues was to be joined and filled by a gridiron matrix of streets, which were numbered to the east and west and lettered to the north and south - excluding J Street, which L'Enfant omitted to avoid confusion with the letters I and J that were indistinguishable and often interchangeable at the time, according to a nineteen ninety-four Washington Post Magazine article.

Pierre L'Enfant, designer of the city, thought of it as the Capital City. Jefferson referred to it as Federal Town. Washington, however, considered this undignified, and instead used the name Federal City. The initial plot of land authorized by the Constitution for the seat of the US government was a one hundred-square mile area. The first commissioners appointed to acquire the property for the new capital and construct the first government buildings made the obvious choice and named the city Washington. At the same time, they decided to call the entire one hundred square-mile area the District of Columbia. Congress later went along with this decision through legislative references to the area.

The city of Washington as designed by L'Enfant did not, of course, fill the one hundred square-mile area authorized by the Constitution for the seat of government. The area also included the cities of Georgetown, seventeen fifty-one, and Alexandria, seventeen forty-nine, which were already in existence. Congress designated the rest of the ten-mile by ten-mile portion outside the corporate limits of these three cities as the County of Alexandria, in the section given by Virginia, and the County of Washington, in the Maryland-ceded portion.

In eighteen forty-six Congress voted to give back to Virginia all the land that state had given to the government in seventeen ninety for creation of the District of Columbia. This move returned about thirty-two square miles of territory to Virginia. Residents of Alexandria and what is now Arlington County, Virginia, thus lost District of Columbia residency and again became Virginia citizens.