(By Douglas Martin. Reprinted from The New York Times © Aug. 20, 2007)

Joybubbles (the legal name of the former Joe Engressia since 1991), a blind 
genius with perfect pitch who accidentally found 

he could make free phone calls
by whistling tones and went on to play a pivotal role in the 1970's subculture 
of "phone phreaks," died Aug. 8 in 

Minneapolis.

He was 58, though he had chosen in 1988 to remain 5 forever, and had the toys 
and teddy bears to prove it. The cause of death 

has not been determined, said
Steven Gibb, a friend and the executor of the Joybubbles estate.

Joybubbles, who was blind at birth, was a famous part of what began as a 
scattered, socially awkward group of precocious 

teens and post-teens fascinated
with exploring the phone system. It could then be seen as the world's 
biggest, most complex, most interesting computer, 

and foiling the phone system
passed for high-tech high jinks in the 1970's.

"It was the only game in town if you wanted to play with a computer," said Phil 
Lapsley, who is writing a book on the phone 

phreaks. Later, other blind
whistlers appeared, but in 1957, Joybubbles may have been the first person to 
whistle his way into the heart of Ma Bell.

Phreaks were precursors of today's computer hackers, and, like some of 
them, Joybubbles ran afoul of the law. Not a few 

phreaks were computer pioneers,
including Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, founders of Apple.

Joybubbles felt that being abused at a school for the blind and being pushed by 
his mother to live up to his 172 I.Q. had 

robbed him of childhood. So he
amassed piles of toys, Jack and Jill magazines and imaginary friends, and he 
took a name he said made people smile.

But he never lost his ardor for phones, and old phone phreaks and younger 
would-have-beens kept calling. Joybubbles loved the 

phone company, reported problems
he had illegally discovered, and even said he had planned his own arrest on 
fraud charges to get a phone job. And so he did, 

twice.

Well before the mid-1970s, when digitalization ended the tone-based system, 
Joybubbles had stopped stealing calls. But he was 

already a legend: he had phoned
around the world, talking into one phone and listening to himself on another.

In an article in Esquire in 1971, the writer Ron Rosenbaum called Joybubbles 
the catalyst uniting disparate phreaks. 

Particularly after news accounts of
his suspension from college in 1968 and conviction in 1971 for phone 
violations, he became a nerve center of the movement.

Josef Carl Engressia Jr. was born May 25, 1949, and moved often because his 
father was a school-picture photographer. At 4 or 

5, he learned to dial by using
the hookswitch like a telegraph key. Four years later, he discovered that he 
could disconnect a call by whistling. He found 

this out when he imitated a
sound in the background on a long-distance call and the line cut off. It turned 
out that his whistle precisely replicated a 

crucial phone company signal,
a 2,600-cycles-per-second tone.

Joybubbles's parents had no phone for five years because of their 
son's obsession. Later, his mother encouraged it 

by reading him technical books.
His high school yearbook photo showed him in a phone booth.

By the time he was a student at the University of South Florida, Joybubbles was 
dialing toll-free or nonworking numbers to 

reach a distant switching point.
Unbeknownst to telephone operators, he could use sounds to dial another number, 
free. He could then jump anywhere in the 

phone system. He was disconnected
from college after being caught making calls for friends at $1 a call. In 1971, 
he moved to Memphis, where he was convicted 

of phone fraud. In Millington,
TN, he was hired to clean phones, a job he hated. In 1975, he moved to Denver 
to ferret out problems in Mountain Bell's 

network.

He tired of that and moved to Minneapolis June 12, 1982, partly because that 
date's numerical representation of 6-12 is 

the same as the city's
area code. He advertised for people yearning to discuss things telephonic and 
wove a web of phone lines to accommodate them. 

He lived on Social Security
disability payments and part-time jobs, like letting university agriculture 
researchers use his superb sense of smell to 

investigate how to control the
odor of hog excrement.

Joybubbles is survived by his mother, Esther Engressia, and his sister, Toni 
Engressia, both of Homestead, FL.

His second life as a youngster included becoming a minister in his own Church 
of Eternal Childhood and collecting tapes of 

every "Mr. Rogers" episode. When
asked why Mr. Rogers mattered, he said: "When you're playing and 
you're just you, powerful things happen."
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