"Automobile Crash Safety Research," 1953

Summary

The Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory did some of the earliest crash testing in the country -- first with airplanes during World War II, then cars. It collected data using electronic instruments and high-speed movie cameras and analyzed the crashes in slow motion. This 1953 report sponsored by Liberty Mutual Insurance Company illustrates some of their findings.

The Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory did some of the earliest crash testing in the country -- first with airplanes during World War II, then cars. It collected data using electronic instruments and high-speed movie cameras and analyzed the crashes in slow motion. This 1953 report sponsored by Liberty Mutual Insurance Company illustrates some of their findings.

Artifact

Report

Date Made

31 December 1953

Subject Date

1953

Creators

Liberty Mutual Insurance Company 

Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory 

Place of Creation

United States, New York, Buffalo 

Creator Notes

Research for crash safety done at Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory, Buffalo, New York; sponsored by the Liberty Mutual Insurance Company.

 On Exhibit

By Request in the Benson Ford Research Center

Object ID

93.1.1775.1

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Paper (Fiber product)
Spiral bindings

Technique

Printing (Process)

Color

Multicolored

Dimensions

Height: 9 in

Width: 6 in

Thickness: 0.125 in

Inscriptions

On front cover: CORNELL AERONAUTICAL LABORATORY, INC. / Typed on front center: REPORT NO. YB-846-D-1 / AUTOMOBILE CRASH / SAFETY RESEARCH / Sponsored by / LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY / 31 December, 1953 / At bottom of front cover: BUFFALO, NEW YORK

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