Street crossings used to be deadly chaos. Discover how Garrett Morgan’s life-saving invention transformed road safety and the way we drive today.

He wasn't the very first person to put a light on a pole, but he was the one who recognized the necessity of the transition period. He took that personal anxiety and turned it into a universal safety standard.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

Eli: Nia, I was sitting at a red light today and realized I have no idea who actually decided we needed these things. I mean, did someone just wake up one day and say, "Let's put colorful lights on a pole"?
Nia: It’s actually way more dramatic than that! Before signals, the streets were total chaos—horses, carriages, and pedestrians all fighting for space. In London, the very first gas-powered signal from 1868 actually exploded and injured the officer operating it!
Eli: Wait, it exploded? That's terrifying.
Nia: Right? It was a dangerous job. But the story really picks up with Garrett Morgan in Cleveland. He was a self-made inventor and one of the first Black citizens there to own a car. After witnessing a horrific crash between a car and a horse carriage, he knew something had to change.
Eli: So he’s the one who gave us the modern system?
Nia: He played a massive role, especially with safety. Let’s explore how his journey from a sixth-grade dropout to a prolific inventor changed the way we drive forever.