Skip to main content

VIDEO: The ‘Hey! Watch out!’ traffic lights system

Time for a taxi ride around New York City, but back in 1928. Sit back and take a cruise, albeit tongue-in-cheek, around some of central New York’s better streets. But look closely. Rail lines were a prominent feature of those wider city streets as cars and trams mixed it along the boulevards, with people happily running between vehicles any which way. The roads surface looked as if there were no wear course, but simply a base course.
September 5, 2016 Read time: 2 mins

Time for a taxi ride around New York City, but back in 1928. Sit back and take a cruise, albeit tongue-in-cheek, around some of central New York’s better streets.

But look closely. Rail lines were a prominent feature of those wider city streets as cars and trams mixed it along the boulevards, with people happily running between vehicles any which way. The roads surface looked as if there were no wear course, but simply a base course.

Notice, also, few traffic signs and the absence of white dividing lines - or any other lines for that matter. In fact, there doesn’t appear to be any traffic lights – traffic semaphores, as they were originally called, after the system of railway semaphores.

In the early 20 century, policemen were the arbiters of right of way and they were found on most major intersections in central New York. But it wasn’t necessarily a safe occupation. Starting in the early 1920s a series of “traffic towers” were set up where the policeman stood in an enclosed kiosk raised high above the junction, possibly 7m or more.

Once such %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal iconic bronze traffic signal tower Click here vintage photos 1920s traffic towers US false http://untappedcities.com/2013/10/21/vintage-photos-1920s-traffic-towers-along-fifth-avenue/ false false%> designed by Joseph H. Freedlander stood at 42nd Street and Fifth Avenue in 1922. It was one of seven Freedlander towers along the length of Fifth Avenue at the time.


Traffic towers were the result of a failure of the first attempt at traffic lights in 1917, according to historical records. In Freedlander’s tower, a policeman changed signals, allowing one to two minutes for each direction. But since 1920, green had meant Fifth Avenue traffic was to stop so crosstown traffic could proceed. A white light had meant go.

But, as more traffic flowed through the arteries of N.Y.C., the more the traffic towers became a nuisance because most were situated in the centre of the road. Towers increasingly became an obstacle in themselves and 1929 signalled the end of the tower, to be replaced with what we are now familiar.

Related Content

  • 4x4 Canter is start turn on Mercedes Benz stand
    April 19, 2012
    A 4x4 version of Mitsubishi’s Canter light truck premiered at INTERMAT on the stand of its sister company Mercedes Benz, which distributes the vehicles in Europe. The 6.5tonne GVW vehicle is fitted with a transfer box that diverts half of the torque to the front wheels at the touch of a button and can be engaged while still on the move.
  • TESMEC Group’s multi-purpose solutions
    April 9, 2013
    The design and production of high powered tracked trenchers for linear excavation and bulk excavation and surface mining is one of many areas of expertise associated with the TESMEC Group. TESMEC also designs and manufactures machines and integrated systems for the stringing and maintenance of power lines; integrated solutions for the efficiency, the management and the monitoring of power grids; machines for the stringing, maintenance and diagnostic of railway power lines; and the design and production of G
  • Guntert and Zimmerman slipform paver lands in Europe
    January 6, 2017
    Guntert & Zimmerman (G&Z) has launched the new S600 multi-purpose concrete slipform paver at INTERMAT. According to company spokesperson David Lipari, the S600 is designed to address the markets shift from large dual lane, mainline paving jobs to smaller cut-up projects. “The S600 is designed to fulfill the need for a small or medium, versatile, multi-purpose paver that retains the ability to achieve good smoothness numbers,” said Lipari.
  • XCMG to create R&D base in the United States
    January 6, 2017
    Leading Chinese construction equipment manufacturing firm XCMG has revealed plans to open a new research and development facility in the United States. Speaking at bauma 2013 Wang Yansong, the company’s vice president, said, “In the second half of this year we are planning to build a R&D centre in the United States. It’ll take about half a year to finish construction. It should open in 2014.” While Yansong would not reveal how much XCMG was investing in the US site, he said it was due to America, along with