Speech of Senator Harry S. Truman to the Traffic Club at Decatur, Illinois
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OCR Page 1 of 6SPEECH BY SENATOR HARRY S. TRUMAN
TO THE TRAFFIC CLUB
AT
enda
DECATUR, ILLINOIS
JUNE 13, 1939
I have been asked to talk toi you about transportation. It is
a
very large subject. Hauling freight and passengers has been the most im-
portant business since governments began. Rome1 roads made her great.
Britain's sea control has made her great. Fast transportation and instant
communication across a whole continent made the United States of America a
gieat nation. In the year of 1607 a handful of English came to the mouth
of the James River in Virginia and founded a colony. It took them some
three months to make the trip. A few days ago ,a passenger plane made that
trip in twenty-seven hours.
From 1846 to 1854 my grandfather was in the freighting business
from Independence, Missouri, to Salt Lake City, Utah. It was customary
for him to start from Independence in March or April and arrive on his
return from the round trip in September or October -- from three to four
months for the one way trip. The transcontinental planes make that trip
in nine hours or a little less.
When John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay went to Ghent to negotiate
a
treaty with Great Britain after the War of 1812, it took them three months
to make the trip, and they were not able to communicate with James Madison,
the President of the United States, at all while the negotiations wère in
progress. When Woodrow Wilson was in Paris negotiating the treaty of
Versailles, everyone in the United States was familiar with all that went
on as soon as it happened.
It has been said that the inventor of the wheel was the creator
of the greatest boon to mankind. No one knows who he was, but he certainly
contributed to the ease of getting from one place to another. In 1854 the
Pony Express was the swiftest method of communication. Now, you or I can
lift a telephone receiver from the hook and talk to San Francisco, New York,
London, Paris, or almost any place else in the world in five minutes.
Evolution is taking place all the time n-this last-moving machine
age of ours, and our greatest difficulty is to prevent the machine from mas-
tering us. The sailing ship and the oxcart were the freight carriers at the
birth of this nation, as they had been for all mankind for six thousand years.
George Washington spent a fortune in an endeavor to link the Potomac and the
Ohio by a canal. Water was the best and swiftest means of moving freight and
passengers in the early days of the Republic. When Andrew Jackson was elected
President, he journeyed to Louisville, Kentucky, from Nashville, Tennessee,
by coach; boarded a steamboat at Louisville and went up the Ohio River to
Wheeling, Virginia, where he again rode a stagecoach to Washington. The
steamboat and the steam engine were epoch-making inventions in transportation.
About the time Jackson was winding up the second New Deal National
Administration (Jefferson's was the first), the Baltimore and Ohio hailroad
was built from Baltimore to Washington. It was not long until railroads were
being constructed all over the country.
It had been the policy of, the Federal Government to build post roads
for the purpose of carrying the mail and for the use of stagecoaches.
The
most famous of these roads was the National Road, constructed with Federal
funds, from Cumberland, Maryland, to Vandalia, Illinois, then the capital
of this great commonwealth. Cumberland was the end of the Chesapeake and
Potomac Canal. Abraham Lincoln succeeded in getting the last Federal appro-
priation for expenditure on that road while he was a Congressman from this
State. When Alabama, Mississippi, Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri were
admitted to the Union, it was a part of the compact of Union that the Federal
Government would build a post road to and through the capital of each of
those states connecting them with Washington.
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