Pages

Thursday, May 10, 2018

A GREAT INVENTION, BUT WHO WOULD EVER WANT TO USE ONE?

FIRST WHITE HOUSE TELEPHONE

Washington, D.C. (JFK+50) On May 10, 1877, President Rutherford B. Hayes had the first telephone installed at the White House. The President, who said he liked the new technology, did not have the luxury of using it in his office.  Mr. Hayes had to walk to the Telegraph Room in the Executive Mansion where the communications device was set up.

The only connection the White House telephone had at the time, however, was with the Treasury Department.  The new White House telephone number was the single digit #1.  

Two years after telephone service was set up in the Nation's Capital there were only 190 subscribers.  Perhaps this was the reason President Hayes rarely used the newly installed White House telephone.

According to the Washington Post, President Barack Obama was critical of President Hayes' indifference to the communications device.  Mr. Obama's criticism was based on a historically unconfirmed comment in which Mr. Hayes reportedly said that the telephone was "a great invention, but who would ever want to use one."

President Hayes did not actually use the telephone until late June 1877 when he spoke with the inventor Professor Alexander Graham Bell.  Upon hearing Mr. Bell's voice over the line, Mr. Hayes said, "That is wonderful."

SOURCES

"Hayes has first phone installed in White House," May 10, www.history.com/

"Obama's whopper about Rutherford B. Hayes and the telephone," by Glenn Kessler, The Washington Post, March 16, 2012, www.washingtonpost.com/

\
1877 Telephone