Under Sunday March 29th, his guy claims it was thought up by a female dr. from Palm Springs;
http://www.ieweekly.com/cms/story/de..._rundown/2201/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_N._Hines
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Under Sunday March 29th, his guy claims it was thought up by a female dr. from Palm Springs;
http://www.ieweekly.com/cms/story/de..._rundown/2201/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_N._Hines
yes. the first lines were used in Warren Michigan. at least the FOG LINE was. im not 100% about the center line...
I suppose that it was possible for the Doc to have thought of the lines there in California. People didn't communicate as easily as we are accustomed to now, or even 50 years ago. Back in the day, ideas such as that weren't broadcast nationally.
A good case in point was the thread on the old forum regarding the found AAA sign. Highway markers and road standards were varied throughout the nation. Same for roads, regional differences in grading, paving, etc.
Within the link below is a biography of Dr.McCarroll, with a mention of Mr. Hines, as well as the same conjecture found above:
http://www.billyholcomb.com/fall_doins_6008_handout.htmQuote:
Tom Patterson also reported that the centerline idea had been proposed by Wayne County, Michigan, Highway Commissioner Edward Hines and utilized as early as 1911.- Mr. Patterson also mentioned another earlier road divider was a stripe of white stones on a Mexico City highway built by the Spanish conquistadors during the 1500s. Ideas and information moved much more slowly in those pre-internet days, allowing the reasonable conclusion that Doctor June invented the centerline idea independently in Indio without any knowledge of Commissioner Hines, Wayne County, Michigan, Highway Commission practices, or 16th-century Mexican history. From that one mile of 4-inch wide stripe on Indio Boulevard sprang the myriad of colors of stripes and other markings on our streets and highways to enhance our motoring safety.
Island of Maui ... 13th Century CE ... High Chief Pi`ilani decreed white stones to be placed along the coastal side of Pi`ilani Highway to keep night travellers from walking off the sea cliffs into the ocean. Nowadays they have a few signs & guardrails:
http://www.hawaiihighways.com/piilani-sea-arch.jpg http://www.hawaiihighways.com/piilan...ight-curve.jpg
Detroit's white lines came later, no doubt...
From the MDOT website:
Widely recognized as one of the great innovators in highway development, [Edward] Hines... conceived the centerline for highways, an invention which has been called the most important single traffic safety device in the history of auto transportation.
http://www.michigan.gov/mdot/0,1607,...6420--,00.html
Well, I guess that trumps everything else. :)Quote:
Island of Maui ... 13th Century CE ... High Chief Pi`ilani decreed white stones to be placed along the coastal side of Pi`ilani Highway to keep night travellers from walking off the sea cliffs into the ocean. Nowadays they have a few signs & guardrails:
All this time I thought Hines invented the floodplain parkway...
...they say the most frequent calls about traffic questions from Windsorites to Detroit radio stations are inquiries about where this Hines Drive is and why it is ALWAYS closed down, LOL!