

Two angles on the same auto accident give a graphic example of bodily risk on the roads during the midcentury period. This happened in Los Angeles, on the Cahuenga Pass, in 1951. Notice how, due to a hard impact with a poured concrete barrier, the stricken car’s steering column was bent up by the force of the driver’s torso being thrown forward. The steering wheel shattered the windshield, and the driver’s head may have impacted there as well, or perhaps hit the even harder metal roofline of the car where it meets the glass. He lies ejected from the vehicle with cranial blood draining onto the pavement, and you’ll notice the car has no latch on the left side of the driver’s seat. This was before the days of mandatory lap restraints, but they were offered as options on some cars. Possibly not this one, though.



































