The first presidential phone call took place in Rhode Island, when Alexander Graham Bell called 19th President Rutherford B. Hayes as he attended a clambake at Rocky Point Park.
To Visit: Rocky Point Ave. | Nothing to see but a sign, but you can stand where the first Presidential phone call took place, if that’s a thing you want to do.
Episode Source Material:
- Rutherford B. Hayes has first phone installed in White House
- A clambake, slurs and phone sex: The long, strange history of presidential calls
- American RadioWorks - The President Calling
- Alexander Graham Bell and Rhode Island
- March 10, 1876: 'Mr. Watson, Come Here ... '
- First speech transmitted by telephone - HISTORY
- TBT: When the First Telephone Call Was Made
- Encyclopedia Brunoniana | Blake, Eli Whitney
- Image 2 of Speech by Alexander Graham Bell, November 2, 1911
- History of the telephone
- Elisha Gray and Alexander Bell telephone controversy
- Elisha Gray and the Telephone Controversy with Alexander Graham Bell
- The Bell Versus Gray Telephone Dispute: Resolving a 144-Year-Old Controversy [Scanning Our Past]
- Obama’s whopper about Rutherford B. Hayes and the telephone
- Before 1929, Nobody Thought the President Needed a Telephone in his Office
- Hotline established between Washington and Moscow - HISTORY
- From the Telegram to Twitter, How Presidents Make Contact With Foreign Leaders
- Electrical telegraph
- History of the telephone
- Who answers the White House phone, anyway?
- Great Invention, But Who Would Ever Want to Use One? – Quote Investigator