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On This Day in Automotive History: November 30


On This Day in Automotive History
November 30

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November 29 « Go to » December 1

Birthdays: Tom Rooney (1881), Orville Epperley (1916), Paul Armagnac (1923), Leonard Lawrence (1925), Orville Nance (1927), Henri Greder (1930), Dick Hutcherson (1931), Trevor Blokdyk (1935), Chuck Ciprich (1941), Dave Dion (1943), Jocko Maggiacomo (1947), Alain Peltier (1948), Tim Slako (1948), Jean-Claude Justice (1949), Tomas Lopez (1953), Bryan Dauzat (1959), Andy Kirby (1961), Scott Melton (1961), Marc Rostan (1963), Shawna Robinson (1964), Mika Salo (1966), Marc Goossens (1969), Horst Felbermayr Jr. (1970), Jimmy Kuhn (1970), Jayme Beck (1979), Piero Rodarte (1983), Alan Tardiff (1984), Corey Williams (1985), Tom Blomqvist (1993), Seb Morris (1995)

1945: The film Detour was released on a limited basis.

1955: William A. Grant, who may have been the Agency's first African-American employee, retires at the mandatory age of 70 after 51 years, 9 months, and 6 days of service. A Washington, DC, native, he had been hired as a student assistant to test cement and aggregates for concrete under Dr. A. B. Cushman. Soon, Director Logan Page arranged for Grant to receive special training in the Office of Geological Survey, where he learned to make, polish, and mount thin sections of mineral and rock specimens for petrographic study and classification. He performed this work for the remainder of his career. According to The News in Public Roads, "Mr. Grant holds a unique place in the respect and affection of his associates. The importance of doing his work conscientiously and with pride in the result has always been his principal concern." Mr. Grant died on August 20, 1966, at Freedmen's Hospital in Washington, DC, after a brief illness.

1960: The decision is made to fold DeSoto, just 47 days after the 1961 models were introduced.

1965: Ralph Nader's Unsafe at Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile was published.

1970: The comment period closes on proposed new bridge inspection standards covering the 236,000 bridges on the Federal-aid systems. FHWA developed the proposed standards in accordance with a requirement of the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1968 enacted in response to concerns about bridge safety after collapse of the Silver Bridge. Section 124 of the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1978 expanded coverage of the National Bridge Inspection Standards to all highway bridges on public roads, including those off the Federal-aid highway systems.

1979: Adam and the Ants release their album Dirk Wears White Sox, which included the song “Car Trouble.”

1983: Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Dole snips a ribbon in ceremonies dedicating the Dulles Access Road extension in northern Virginia. Describing the road as “wonderful, wonderful,” she says it “should assist the further growth” of Dulles International Airport. Designed and built under the supervision of FHWA's Office of Direct Federal Programs (Region 15) for the FAA, the $25-million highway will cut driving time between Washington, DC, and Dulles International Airport in half. The extension, which is intended to assist the growth of the underused airport, includes room for future construction of a Metrorail line.

1997: The film The Love Bug was released.

1999: ExxonMobil is formed by the merger of Exxon and Mobil

2007: Evel Knievel died.

2009: The third generation Audi A8 was introduced in Miami.

2013: Roger Rodas (driver) and Paul Walker (passenger) died in a single-car accident of a modified high-performance Porsche in Los Angeles.

In the News...

DateArticleAuthor/Source
30 November 1902Gasoline Motor's Fast Mile.
(Barney Oldfield sets circle track record of 1:02)
The New York Times




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