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Noteworthy

When Were License Plates Invented?

[History.com ] Appearing in 1900, the first license plates in the United States were made of leather.  

    

They take up a small portion of a car’s exterior, easily overlooked when next to sleek curves, bright lights and colorful bumper stickers. Yet, license plates are an indispensable part of the driving experience, as anyone who attempts to bypass their installation is sure to learn from an observant police officer. Created for functional purposes, license plates have also become a means by which drivers can display their personality or support their favorite cause. Even standard designs feature artistic flourishes that change over the decades. The multitude of varieties spawned the launch of the Automobile License Plate Collectors Association (ALPCA) in 1954 and, more recently, the creation of the nonprofit Vehicle Registration History Center (VRHC) to document the lifespan of these understated but essential car components.

U.S. LICENSE PLATES BEGIN APPEARING IN THE EARLY 20TH CENTURY


Numbered metal tags were displayed on London’s taxicabs and horse-drawn carriages for hire as far back as 1831, according to collector and VRHC co-founder Eric Tanner’s website All About License Plates. With the arrival of motor vehicles toward the end of the 19th century, municipalities began seeing a greater need to register and monitor these speedy, disruptive machines. “When cities began to see that there was damage to the roads, people were getting freaked out” by cars, says Jeff Minard, an ALPCA member and VRHC co-founder. “They’re causing a disturbance... They’re bothering the police horses.”


As public interest in the identity of drivers grew, so did calls for vehicle registration—typically for a fee. Because the well-maintained roads of city parks proved an irresistible draw to car owners, park boards of major metropolitan areas took the early lead in regulating vehicles. Tanner, who is also editor of ALPCA’s Plates Magazine, traces the first motor vehicle registration in the United States to a permit the Boston Park Commission issued in 1898. He reports Philadelphia’s Fairmount Park Commission distributed the country’s first license plates—in the form of leather tags—in 1900.


On April 25, 1901, New York Governor Benjamin Odell Jr. signed a bill that required the motor vehicle registration and for vehicles to display “the separate initials of the owner’s name placed upon the back thereof in a conspicuous place, the letters forming such initials to be at least three inches in height.” Thus marked the beginning of state-mandated license plates throughout the country, even if this particular law didn’t specify anything about a “plate.” Some owners simply painted their initials in a prominent spot on their vehicles. Many others preferred not to mark up their expensive new toys and instead satisfied the legal requirements with the installation of a wood or leather tag.

STANDARDIZING VEHICLE REGISTRATION


In June 1903, Massachusetts became the first state to issue manufactured license plates using iron and porcelain enamel. Recognizing the limitations of delineating a rapidly growing populace of car owners by initials, the state instead printed white numbers on its dark blue plates, with No. 1 going to a well-connected car enthusiast named Frederick Tudor.


The next 15 years produced a mishmash of city and state laws governing the distribution of license plates, with cars featuring either the self-made leather and wood varieties or official state-issued versions of porcelain and later embossed steel. However, according to ALPCA member and VRHC co-founder Rich Dragon, the process became relatively streamlined as states took control of oversight to eliminate local ordinances and homemade efforts. State governments began requiring annual renewals for a corresponding fee, and some issued new plates for vehicles each year. States also forged reciprocity agreements that allowed cars to cross state lines without the need to affix different plates.


“[The] foundational characteristics of our modern registration system, they were developed during [this] period,” Dragon says. As of January 1, 1918, all 48 states had adopted statewide registration laws. Although many improvements have been made to license plates and registration systems over the past 100-plus years, these basic attributes remain unchanged.


WORLD WAR II LEADS TO PRODUCTION EXPERIMENTS


Over the next two decades, most of the notable changes to license plates were of the aesthetic variety. Arizona had been the first state to incorporate a purely decorative element in 1917 with the depiction of a steer’s head to promote its beef industry. Idaho took a page from that marketing ploy to trumpet its potatoes with the outline of a spud beginning in 1928. And while influential individuals had long been able to secure preferred numbers and letters to mark their cars, average folks in Connecticut got the same chance when the state introduced the first vanity plates in 1937.


The arrival of World War II brought a more serious overhaul to the industry as Uncle Sam commandeered much of the steel that had gone toward license plate production for the war effort. Some states responded by shrinking the size of their plates. Many others began distributing metal tabs with years printed on them to eliminate the need to continuously churn out new plates. “Tabs are essentially a metal equivalent of a sticker, so it’s like a little tiny license plate that you bolt onto your plate,” Dragon explains. “You rivet it on there…and it shows that you’ve paid the fee for the next year.” Other states eschewed metal altogether and experimented with plates made from cardboard, sugarcane or soybeans, though the latter reportedly drew some nibbles from hungry barnyard animals.


Overshadowed by the metal conservation strategies of the war years was the emergence of reflective technology to help foster safer nighttime driving. Georgia had some success in this endeavor by producing plates embedded with tiny glass beads in 1941. A bigger breakthrough came with reflective plastic sheeting such as 3M’s Scotchlite material. It first appeared on Connecticut license plates in the ’40s and eventually was adopted by all states.

1956: ESTABLISHING A FIXED LICENSE PLATE SIZE


Along with featuring varying colors, slogans and other pictorial elements, license plates around the United States came in differing sizes through the first half of the 20th century. However, that changed in 1956 with the introduction of a fixed dimension of 12 by 6 inches.


“Size standardization was solely the effort of the [American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators] which aimed to develop a uniform size and shape so that car manufacturers could design auto bodies more efficiently to accommodate them, especially with recessed mountings and lighting for the rear plate,” Tanner explains. “Their campaign started in 1953 and achieved final compliance by October 1957, with most states and provinces switching in 1956 or 1957.”






SPECIALTY PLATES AND DIGITAL SCREENS ARRIVE

More visual changes arrived in the 1970s as advances in screen printing made the graphical enhancement of plates easier for manufacturers. This technique first debuted on a South Dakota license plate featuring Mount Rushmore’s outline in 1974. An explosion of colorful screen-printed models soon followed, with states churning out swarms of bicentennial-themed plates.


Improved printing capabilities combined with an increasing demand for personalization fueled the rise of specialty plates that mark membership in an organization or devotion to a particular cause. The first widely popular specialty plate debuted in January 1987 in commemoration of the previous year’s space shuttle Challenger tragedy. By 2023, drivers had the option to choose from more than 8,000 such plates across the country, reflecting professional standing, support of a charity or a team fandom.


The turn of the century brought more developments that threatened to end longstanding practices in the industry. Some states turned to mass producing flat aluminum plates after decades of embossed versions to speed production. Even more disruptive was the inevitable arrival of electronic license plates.


Introduced in California in 2018, the first generation of wireless LTE-powered license plates were displayed on monochromatic digital ink screens. Although these plates offered the ability to quickly renew registrations and even the promise of advertising revenue for those willing to negotiate with local businesses, they also came with a hefty price tag, suggesting that it might take some time before drivers give up old metal markers for good.

Historical Massachusetts

 America’s War of Independence unfolded across a Massachusetts that, in many places, looks remarkably unchanged today. From the Berkshires to Boston Harbor, from the North Shore to the South Coast, you can walk the very ground where history was made, experiencing the Revolution in a living landscape rather than from behind the ropes of a museum exhibit. So, to celebrate the nation’s 250th anniversary this year, lace up your walking shoes and head into the great outdoors to experience parks, trails, battlefields, and storied coastline where you can still feel the Spirit of ’76 in the air.


Please feel free to click on the links, highlighted in blue, for additional historical information.

Explore the Lexington Battle Green

            

The Battles of Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, are forever etched in our nation’s memory as the first military action of the Revolutionary War. The opening shots of that clash rang out on Lexington’s town common, better known as the Lexington Battle Green. Today the triangular, grassy park is dotted with monuments, most notably a granite obelisk erected in 1799 that stands as the oldest memorial to the Revolutionary War. One of the few places in the country where the American flag is federally authorized to fly 24 hours a day, the Battle Green invites visitors to explore on their own or take a guided walking tour offered by the visitors center daily from now through October.

Hit the Battle Road Trail

A five-mile path stretching from Lexington to Concord, the Battle Road Trail offers the chance to follow in the footsteps of British troops who marched from Boston straight into the beginning of the American Revolution. The trail connects several key sites within Minute Man National Historical Park (including the place where Paul Revere was captured by a British patrol), but it also has its own tale to tell: As the British later retreated from Concord, they were ambushed repeatedly along this same road by vengeful Patriot militia. If you want to travel the entire length, biking is the easiest way—however, walking even a part of it will immerse you in the feeling of that dramatic day.

Cross the North Bridge

 

Don’t be lulled by the tranquil setting of the North Bridge, which curves above the Concord River in the heart of Minute Man National Historical Park. It was here that the Battle of Concord erupted with “the shot heard ’round the world,” as Ralph Waldo Emerson famously described the opening salvo. Stroll across the wood bridge (a historically accurate reconstruction of the 1775 span) for a closer look at Daniel Chester French’s iconic Minute Man statue, then make your way across a pastoral field to the 1911 brick mansion that serves as a visitor center. Inside, there’s a video retelling of the battle, a plank from the original bridge, and uniforms and weapons used by Colonial and British soldiers; outside are gardens and a lawn perfect for picnicking.

Hike the Knox Trail

In December 1775, George Washington sent a young officer named Henry Knox—who was a Boston bookseller before the war broke out—to transport captured British cannons and other key pieces of artillery from upstate New York all the way to Boston. Knox (who is credited with proposing the audacious plan in the first place) readily agreed, and set out from Fort Ticonderoga with 60 tons of weaponry on a 300-mile winter trek that took 56 days, several dozen men, and more than 200 horses and oxen to successfully complete. A heroic feat that helped end the Siege of Boston, Knox’s expedition is now commemorated with a series of markers along his route from New York to Massachusetts. And while large sections have been paved over, devoted history buffs can still walk part of Knox’s original path: Just head to Otis State Forest in the Berkshires, where an easy three-mile hike awaits.

Beach at Fort Phoenix

Tucked away in the South Coast town of Fairhaven is a must-visit for anyone whose imagination lights up at the thought of sea battles: Fort Phoenix State Reservation, which commemorates the Revolutionary War’s first naval engagement, in May 1775. A fort was established on this site later that year, then destroyed in a 1778 British raid, and ultimately rebuilt and named Fort Phoenix in honor of its “rising from the ashes.” These days, the remnants of the fort are the historical centerpiece of a 28-acre state park that features a popular half mile-long beach along Buzzards Bay and plenty of other options for recreation, including basketball, pickleball, volleyball, and tennis courts.

Stage Fort Park

History comes alive June 20–21 at Stage Fort Park in Gloucester, Cape Ann’s largest town, when more than 500 reenactors clash on land and sea in the Battle of Gloucester. In the original August 1775 skirmish, local militia successfully fought off the British sloop Falcon and recaptured two of their own schooners from the enemy. It was a huge morale boost for the colonial forces, and many credit the event as sparking the creation of America’s navy. In addition to a historical marker by water, several preserved cannons can be found on the bluffs; elsewhere in the 60-acre park are beaches, baseball fields, picnic areas, and other amenities for outdoor lovers.

Salem Maritime National Historical Park

To explore a mix of lore and stories in just one place, make tracks for Salem Maritime National Historical Park, where 12 historic structures on Salem’s waterfront are clustered on nine acres. This North Shore city held a key role in the lead-up to the American Revolution: British General Thomas Gage made it the provincial capital in 1774 to punish Boston for its Tea Party rebellion. During your stroll around the campus, learn more about early Colonial trade, the Revolutionary Era, and other chapters from nearly 600 years of Salem’s maritime history.

Fort Sewall

Originally built in 1644 and named Gale’s Head, the fort jutting out into Marblehead Harbor was rebuilt and expanded in 1775 to better defend the coast during the Revolutionary War. Fast-forward through two and a half centuries and a name change, and Fort Sewall is now a scenic public park. A coastal walking path offers views of boaters, swimmers, and Marblehead Light, while the fort itself has a lingering presence in old bunkers and underground rooms once used to detain prisoners. Mark your calendar for the Glover’s Marblehead Regiment Encampment on July 18, when reenactors channel the spirit of the legendary Revolutionary fighting force.

Historic Lighthouses

  

Boston Harbor, one of America’s most historically significant ports, is the backdrop for two-hour Boston Harbor Lighthouse Cruise excursions, which begin running June 27 and continue into September. Three iconic lighthouses dot the route: Long Island Head Light, Graves Light, and Boston Light, the oldest light station in the country. Along the way, with the sea breeze at your back, you’ll learn how these very waters shaped the Siege of Boston and the course of the Revolutionary War.


LOVE that new shoe smell!


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