They were later bought by hams on the used market, and were the first FM transceivers on their bands prior to 1970.
I never knew that. I thought most early 6, 2, and 440 gear was converted commercial two-way surplus, the sort with handheld microphones with the big ominous Ms on them.
Well, landlines weren't especially private either, but they were more resistant to casual listening by outside parties because one had to physically tap into them, which the casual eavesdropper would not even want to try.
When CALEA forced government backdoors into all our PSTN switches in 1994, experts said they would become targets for hackers. A couple of years ago, those people were vindicated when, to the government's humiliation, the
Salt Typhoon scandal broke, revealing that foreign actors were crawling in and out of those backdoors like baskets of snakes, listening in on all the calls they wanted of pretty much anyone they desired. The public-facing messaging was that the backdoors had only been breached recently. To many, that was government speak for their regular abuse having only been recently discovered.
Phreakers knew about and were getting into phone company
REMOBS and even operator trunks decades before CALEA.
Are these radio phones still usable (and legal with the proper licensing) without the old analog landline phone system
Technically yes. Even though MTS utilized analog radio transmissions, it didn't depend on the PSTN itself remaining analog. The PSTN began switching over to digital (save for our last mile copper loops) in the 1970s, and MTS happily continued chugging along in spite of that -- at least until AMPS dislodged it in the 1980s.
As for whether MTS could still be offered as a service now, Wikipedia's
MTS article surprisingly suggests it still exists in some very rural areas. But in most locales resembling human civilization, the frequencies formerly allocated to it (see KeithE4's post or the Wikipedia article) were evidently gobbled up long ago by the old school one-way pager companies. Which would put the kibosh on ever resurrecting legacy MTS gear in most areas without doing hardware modifications.
And even if someone wanted to go that far (or make new hardware), there would be no customers. MTS was only capable of supporting up to 33 simultaneous calls in each service area, and since it relied on elevated transmitter towers, each of its service areas was widescale. (Intended customers were mostly corporate and executives.) Here's a campy late-1940s AT&T film detailing its introduction and showing some of the original automobile units involved:
Interestingly, one-way pager service
still exists. Doctors and certain other professionals still love having it because pager transmitters run high wattage and penetrate deep into buildings, including underground concrete basements. Other people who want to be reachable without modern cellular carriers data mining their exact travels also like pairing them with dumb phones. (The dumb phone stays in a faraday pouch so it can't amass GPS coordinates over time, and it gets pulled out only when the one-way pager goes off, indicating someone wants to talk.)