Sept. 13, 1899: New Yorker Becomes First U.S. Pedestrian Killed by Car
1899: Henry Bliss becomes the first pedestrian known to be killed by an automobile in North America.
Bliss, a Manhattan real estate salesman, had just stepped off a streetcar at West 74th Street and Central Park West (a few blocks south of the American Museum of Natural History) when he was struck by a passing taxicab. It knocked him unconscious, crushing his skull and chest. He died the following morning.
The driver of the cab, an electric-powered vehicle, was arrested and charged with manslaughter. The charges were dropped after it was determined that Bliss’ death was unintentional.
On the...
The Quest for the Golden Nintendo Game
One Friday afternoon in 2010, Pat Contri got the Facebook message of every videogame collector’s dreams. A friend who worked at the local game store started texting him cryptic photographs of something a customer had just traded in.
He stared at the blurry, gray-and-green pictures. What at first looked like a row of shelves, he eventually realized, was a close-up of several exposed DIP switches. Just then, like a Tetris block dropping neatly into place, it...
Flying the Police Aircraft of the Future
By Matt Hardigee, Jalopnik
TOMBALL, Texas — The last thing you want to hear before you climb into an open aircraft with no doors is how cheap it is to fly, but that’s the first thing the police chief tells me before strapping me into the back seat of America’s first police gyroplane.
Conceptually, a gyroplane (or autogyro) is an old idea. Get the motor spinning and use a rear-mounted propeller to gain speed. As you travel forward an angled, unpowered overhead rotor utilizes the air pushed into the blades to create lift.
“The use of this type of aircraft isn’t novel. The novelty l...