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On This Day in Automotive History: December 19


On This Day in Automotive History
December 19

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December 18 « Go to » December 20

Birthdays: Louis Schneider (1901), Giovanni Lurani (1905), Art Binkley (1920), Tommy Bostick (1935), Cyril Grandet (1942), Antoine Salamin (1945), Jim Siewert (1945), Laurent Ferrier (1946), Tony Kester (1950), Craig Gower (1953), Jeff Allam (1954), John Provenzano (1954), Robin Donovan (1955), Erik Messley (1958), Gary Wright (1958), Thomas Gruber (1959), Ray Daniels (1960), Claude-Yves Gosselin (1961), Wesley Mills (1961), Blake Rosser (1963), Steve Teets (1965), Robert Amren (1968), Richard Hammond (1969), Dustin Dudley (1974), Luc Lesage (1974), Keith Roggen (1979), Jonathan Cash (1980), Michael Crofford (1980), Tony Ricci (1981), Andy Lee (1982), Tyler VandeKamp (1986), Andrew Carbonell (1989), Spencer Montgomery (1994)

1965: "A terrible mistake has been made in cities," landscape architect Lawrence Halprin tells The Los Angeles Times. The week before, he and other members of a board appointed by Administrator Rex Whitton to draft guidelines for design and location of urban expressways, had met with Whitton. Halprin says Whitton understands that, "It wasn't realized that as freeways come to cities, they have to not only move people but . . . do this in a way that is not going to destroy the cities."

1972: Secretary of Transportation John Volpe says FHWA will require installation of crash cushions on new Federal-aid freeways, high-speed roads, and high-volume roadways at locations that cannot be designed to eliminate roadside hazards. The devices can help reduce the toll--4,500 lives a year--from crashes with fixed objects.

1987: The 33.8-mile "Missing Link" of I-95, from PGA Boulevard in North Palm Beach to Fort Pierce, FL, opens, completing all of I-95 with the exception of a planned connection between the New Jersey and Pennsylvania Turnpikes.

1991: Amid numbing cold, officials gather for the opening of I-476--best known as the Blue Route--in Bucks County, PA. The opening ceremony lasts only 30 minutes because, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer, "No one wanted to see the specially designed, 50-foot-long red, white and blue ribbon whipped away by the wind before [Governor Robert] Casey could cut it." The Inquirer calls the Blue Route "the most costly, most bitterly opposed highway in Pennsylvania history," but the 21.5-mile, $600-million highway is hailed for its environmental sensitivity and harmony with its surroundings.

1995: Secretary of Transportation Federico Pea announces plans to reorganize the USDOT by combining ten Modal Administrations into three based on the strategies of consolidation, downsizing, and streamlining. The plan would abolish the FHWA.

1997: With Secretary of Transportation Rodney E. Slater looking on, Gloria J. Jeff takes the oath of office as Deputy Administrator. As Associate Administrator for Policy, she had taken on the role of Acting Administrator prior to the arrival of Administrator Kenneth R. Wykle. Jeff is the third woman, and the first African American, to hold the position of Deputy Administrator.

2005: CSK Auto completes the purchase of Murray's Discount Auto Stores.

2012: General Motors announced that Chevrolet Camaro production would return to the United States.

2016: The Lamborghini Aventador S was revealed at the Sant'Agata factory.

2016: NASCAR announces that the name for the 2017 Cup Series will be the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series.

In the News...

DateArticleAuthor/Source
19 December 1909RUNAWAY ACCIDENT FATAL.The New York Times




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