Archive for January 2nd, 2026

CANDIDACY FOR PRESIDENT ANNOUNCED

Campaign moments through history: John F. Kennedy announces run for  president
”I am announcing today my candidacy for the Presidency
of the United States.”
 

65 years ago on January 2, 1960: Senator John F. Kennedy announced his  candidacy for the presidency of the United States., He would go on to win  his party's nomination in July of that year, and in ...

John F. Kennedy officially announced his run for President on
January 2, 1960, via a written statement to the press, sparking
extensive newspaper coverage detailing his vision for American leadership, addressing concerns about his Catholic faith, and highlighting issues like the Cold War and economic vitality,
as seen in clippings preserved by the
JFK Library.

Major newspapers covered his declaration, which framed the
presidency as crucial for global freedom and promised an
energetic, outward-looking America, setting the stage for
his eventual nomination and narrow victory over Richard
Nixon.

January 4, 1960: The Herald Republican of Springfield, MA, announces JFK’s formal entry into Presidential race.

posted by Bob Karm in ANNIVERSARY,ELECTION,HISTORY,NEWSPAPER,President and have No Comments

NATIONAL SPEED LIMIT SIGNED INTO LAW

Speed Limit 55 MPH - Road, Street, Traffic, Garage, Home - Aluminum Sign 2  Sizes - Etsy

OnThisDay in 1974, President Richard Nixon signed into law the Emergency  Highway Energy Conservation Act, a bill effectively limiting the national  speed limit to 55 miles per hour (mph). This bill required

On January 2, 1974, President Richard M. Nixon (above) signs      
the
Emergency Highway Energy Conservation Act, setting a
new national maximum speed limit.

Prior to 1974, individual states set speed limits within their
boundaries and highway speed limits across the country
ranged from 40 mph to 80 mph.

The U.S. and other industrialized nations enjoyed easy
access to cheap Middle Eastern oil from 1950 to 1972,
but the Arab-Israeli conflict changed that dramatically
in 1973.

Beyond fuel savings, the NMSL significantly lowered the
national traffic fatality rate, becoming a road safety tool
as well.        
        

50 Years Since Nixon's 'National Speed Limit': A Tale of Missed  Opportunities — Streetsblog USA

No photo description available.
Lt. Gen. Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., and NHSA Administrator
Joan Claybrook, President Jimmy Carter and Secretary
of Transportation Brock Adams, unveiling a promotional
speed limit poster in the Oval Office, 1977 (Jimmy Carter Presidential Library/NARA)


        
       

posted by Bob Karm in Highway,HISTORY,President,Signs,Speed Limit and have No Comments