The first time I ever went to England, back in the 90s, I almost got run over by a car. It was my own fault, of course.
We had started in London, where a good many of the street corners have LOOK LEFT (or RIGHT, depending on the street) signs on the ground. But when we continued on to smaller towns, those helpful signs weren’t there. I think we were on a one-way street, and out of habit, I looked to the right. There weren’t any cars coming, so I started crossing…just as a car was getting ready to go past me on the left.
Here are all the countries and their status in terms of what side of the road they currently (and, as applicable, used to) drive on:
But why?
It’s one thing to know a fact. It’s another to learn the history behind the facts. There are actually a few theories as to why people in the UK drive to the left:
Knights & their swords
Most people today are right-handed. That tendency goes back thousands of years. So back during medieval times, most knights were right handed. Since they would have held their swords in their right hand during a duel, they’d carry them on the left side of their body. If someone with a sword met another person coming towards them on the road, it would make sense to be on the left side, since that’d allow them to offer their closer hand to greet the person they were passing, if they appeared to be friendly). If the person coming in the other direction were a threat, they’d be prepared to defend themselves.
Also, since knights wore their swords on their left side, they would naturally mount their horses from the left side so their swords wouldn’t get in their way. With that, it made sense to position the horse against the left curb so the knights could mount their horses from the curb, instead of the middle of the street.
Blame the French
The English and the French don’t always get along, so…
Apparently the French revolutionary government under Maximilien Robespierre dictated that everyone drive on the right. Napoleon and his armies marched through Europe and spread the word that everyone should drive on the right.
The British, long unfriendly with the French, purposely stayed on the left side, as a “2 fingered salute” (read: to give the French the English version of the middle finger).
Then why do we stay to the right in the U.S.?
Again, it depends on who you ask, although one theory appears to be more popular than the other.
Thumbing our noses at the English
Albert C. Rose, who served as “unofficial historian” of the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads during much of his long career with the agency (1919-1950) researched why. He suggested that, “…no valid reason existed for transplanting the English left-hand rule especially since the nationals of other European countries had established in America widely separated settlements in which their own customs were observed.”
They wanted to do things their way.
Conestoga wagons
In the 1700s, Conestoga wagons were invented as a way for families to go “out west” and carry their belongings, as well as for peddlers and salesmen to have a place to hold their wares as they traveled and sold them and/or traded with Native Americans.
Whoever was driving the horses could ride one of the horses or sit on a “lazy board” that slid out of the side of the wagon.
But sometimes, the driver needed better control of the horses. In that case, they’d walk alongside the horses, giving them verbal commands (“Gee” and “Haw” were popular). Sometimes, the driver would also pull ropes and levels to keep the horses in better control. Since, once again, most drivers were right-handed, the controls would be on the left side of the wagon. That meant the driver was on the left side, and the wagon was on the right.
As more and more Conestoga wagons were on these roadways, the country’s first major highway was opened in 1795. Then known as the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike Road, the Pennsylvania highway had rules, one of which was that all traffic had to stay to the right.
Is Henry Ford to blame?
Some people say Henry Ford got people to drive on the right. The general consensus is that the theory’s probably not true. Yes, he did put the steering wheel on the left side of the Model T Ford automobile back in 1908, thereby making him the father of driving on the right side of the road. But most people think he did it because people were already driving their horse-drawn wagons on the right side of the road anyway.
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