Lyndon B. Johnson vehicle safety bill

President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law the vehicle safety bill after the U.S. Senate passed the legislation on this date 50 years ago (Image/lbjlibrary.org)

It was exactly 50 years ago today when the U.S. Senate passed legislation that created the nation’s first mandatory federal safety standards for motor vehicles.

A 76-0 vote paved the way for the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act to become law after LBJ changed everything forever.

Not THAT LBJ.

We’re talking about President Lyndon B. Johnson who signed the bill into law a few months later.

“For the first time in our history,” Johnson said, “we can mount a truly comprehensive attack on the rising toll of death and destruction on the nation’s highways that last year alone claimed 50,000 lives…We can no longer tolerate such anarchy on wheels.”

You can read a bit here from Road & Track about how vehicle safety has evolved though the years.

Author: Matt Griswold

After a 10-year newspaper journalism career, Matt Griswold spent another decade writing about the automotive aftermarket and motorsports. He was part of the original OnAllCylinders editorial team when it launched in 2012.