President Odumbo's latest incident of historical illiteracy
In mocking the GOP, Odumbo cited an anecdote about President Hayes 
[BTW, General Hayes was a Civil War veteran who actively engaged in the fight against slavery] in which,  upon using the telephone for the first time, Hayes 'purportedly'
* said, “It’s a great  invention, but who would ever want to use one?”
  “That’s why he’s not on Mount Rushmore,” Odumbo said. “He’s explaining  why we can’t do something instead of why we can do something.” 
But Nan Card, curator of manuscripts at the Rutherford B. Hayes  Presidential Center in Ohio, told TPM that the nation’s 19th president  was being unfairly tagged as a Luddite.
                 “Hayes really was the opposite,” she said. “He had the first  telephone in the White House. He also had the first typewriter in the  White House. Thomas Edison came to the White House as well and displayed  the phonograph. Photographing people who came to the White House and  visited at dinners and receptions was also very important to him.”
  
*While often cited, Card said Odumbo’s cited quote had 
never been  confirmed by contemporary sources and is likely apocryphal. A  contemporary newspaper account of his first experience with telephone in  1877 from the Providence Journal records a smiling Hayes repeatedly  responding to the voice on the other line with the phrase, “That is  wonderful.” 
. . . . There's more after that—and keep in mind, this isn't Odumbo displaying his ignorance in off-the-cuff remarks. This was from a 
prepared speech—which  means that a truckload of people reviewed it, edited it, and approved  it. It's just that no one bothered to fact-check it.
http://www.weeklystandard.com/blogs/...ng_633962.html