Before America entered the war, bicycles were largely used as a means of recreation and pleasure, and for riding to and from school by young people. Now they are helping to provide essential wartime transportation as well. More and more people are riding bicycles to and from work, for shopping, for errands, and for other purposes."
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
World War 2 bicycle safety pamphlet
There was a time when husbanding scarce resources was considered the patriotic American thing to do. See more of this WW2 bike safety pamphlet at FixedGear's Flickr stream.
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1,100 cyclist deaths with - what? - maybe a total population of 150 million? We have a larger population now and fewer cyclist deaths. Should we infer that cycling is now safer that it was in the 1940s, and if so, what causative factor explains the difference?
ReplyDeleteI noticed that also, Ed. We have more than twice the population and a little more than half the cyclist deaths.
ReplyDeleteBesides improved traffic safety, maybe there were four or five times as many cyclists?
Hi Richard,
ReplyDeleteYou may be interested in two vintage Times-Call articles from Longmont that I've recently posted:
http://longmontian.blogspot.com/2007/10/vintage-longmont-bicycle-newspaper.html
Thanks, Van. Very interesting.
ReplyDelete