Ford Mustang Introduced (1964)

If April 16, 1972, was a day on which Panda-Monium broke out in the U.S. because of the appearance of giant pandas, April 17 was a day of pandemonium  for another kind of beast—the Ford Mustang.

The 1964 ½ Ford Mustang could be purchased for the first time on April 17, 1964.  Car fans awaited the day with great anticipation.  Simultaneous ads ran on April 16 on the three major television networks, and the car was officially introduced at the New York World’s Fair.   Although we think of it as being named after a wild horse, the name actually comes from the World War II “Mustang” fighter plane.

The Ford Mustang was the “working man’s Thunderbird,” a sports car that could seat four and cost a modest $2300.  It could be plain and minimally powered, using parts re-tooled from the economy Ford Falcon, or it could be souped up in style and power.  A buying frenzy broke out on April 17—22,000 Mustangs were bought on that one day.  More than 400,000 were bought in the first year, and more than 9 million have been bought since then.

1964 Ford Mustang (photo by Tokumeigakarinoaoshima)

A friend during my freshman year at the University of Illinois in 1966 brought his Mustang down to school one weekend (freshmen couldn’t have cars on campus in those days).  He let me drive the cherry red convertible around campus.  Heads turned as I cruised up and down Green Street, and for the one and only time I felt like the BMOC.

And that’s the way Americans have always felt about their cars.  When I speak around the country about the BP oil spill, I tell audiences that the cause of the spill wasn’t the greed or disregard of the oil companies.  No, it is American addiction to oil.  We love our cars and, so, we have organized our society around driving the wonderful, beautiful things.  Around the neighborhood, around town, around the country.  From gas station to gas station.

Consequently, America—along with Canada, which also loves its cars—uses more oil than anywhere in the world.  With 4.5% of the world’s population, the U.S. uses 20% of the world’s petroleum.  With about 18% of the world’s population, China uses about 12% of its petroleum.  On a per person basis, the U.S. uses about 12 gallons per person per day, while China uses about 2 gallons per person per day—so, each American uses 6 times more petroleum each day to get by than a Chinese person does.

And where do we get that fuel for our cars?   From everywhere is the answer.  The U.S. produces about 80% of the oil we consume, a recent turn-around from decades of large and increasing oil imports.  That percentage of domestic production—the highest since 1964—has  grown recently with technologies that allow the exploitation of so-called “tight oil” (technologies like fracking, horizontal drilling and seismic imaging).  The U.S. imports the remainder from 84 different countries.  Most comes from Canada (40%), Saudia Arabia (9%), Mexico (9%), Venezuela (7%) and Iraq (6%).

Oil consumption in the U.S. peaked in 2004, after a rising trend that has lasted, except for short disruptions, since oil became widely available at the start of the 20th Century.  Projections used to anticipate much higher oil consumption, but now projections suggest a stable consumption well into the future.  The lack of increasing consumption has occurred for two reasons.  First, people are driving less—vehicle miles traveled has declined, because fuel prices have risen and because the baby-boomers are driving less.  Second, rising fuel economy—getting more miles per gallon—has made driving more efficient.

So, there is good news for our oil addiction.  We seem to be laying off the sauce, at least a little bit.  If we keep it going, perhaps we might just have a chance to save the atmosphere and assure a sustainable planet.

And if we can convert all those classic Ford Mustangs into electric cars, what a wonderful world it will be!

References:

Classic Pony Cars.  History of the Ford Mustang.  Available at:  http://classicponycars.com/history.html.  Accessed April 16, 2018.

Cox, Lydia.  2015.  The surprising decline in US petroleum consumption.  World Economic Forum, 10 Jul 2015.  Available at:  https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2015/07/the-surprising-decline-in-us-petroleum-consumption/.  Accessed April 16, 2018.

Energy Information Administration.  How much oil consumed by the United States comes from foreign countries?  Available at:  https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs/faq.php?id=32&t=6.  Accessed April 16, 2018.

History.com.  Ford Mustang debuts at World’s Fair.  This Day In History, April 17.  Available at:  https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/ford-mustang-debuts-at-worlds-fair.  Accessed April 16, 2018.

This Month in Conservation

January 1
NEPA Enacted (1970)
January 2
Bob Marshall Born (1901)
January 3
Canaveral National Seashore Created (1975)
January 4
The Real James Bond Born (1900)
January 5
National Bird Day
January 6
Wild Kingdom First Airs (1963)
January 7
Gerald Durrell Born (1925)
January 7
Albert Bierstadt, American landscape painter, born (1830)
January 8
Alfred Russel Wallace Born (1823)
January 9
Muir Woods National Monument Created (1908)
January 10
National Houseplant Appreciation Day
January 11
Aldo Leopold Born (1887)
January 12
National Trust of England Established (1895)
January 13
MaVynee Betsch, the Beach Lady, Born (1935)
January 14
Martin Holdgate, British Conservationist, Born (1931)
January 15
British Museum Opened (1759)
January 16
Dian Fossey Born (1932)
January 17
Benjamin Franklin, America’s First Environmentalist, Born (1706)
January 18
White Sands National Monument Created (1933)
January 19
Yul Choi, Korean Environmentalist, Born (1949)
January 19
Acadia National Park Established (1929)
January 20
Penguin Appreciation Day
January 21
The Wilderness Society Founded (1935)
January 22
Iraq Sabotages Kuwaiti Oil Fields (1991)
January 23
Sweden Bans CFCs in Aerosols (1978)
January 24
Baden-Powell Publishes “Scouting for Boys” (1908)
January 25
Badlands National Park Established (1939)
January 26
Benjamin Franklin Disses the Bald Eagle (1784)
January 27
National Geographic Society Incorporated (1888)
January 28
Bermuda Petrel, Thought Extinct for 300 Years, Re-discovered (1951)
January 29
Edward Abbey, author of “Desert Solitaire,” Born (1927)
January 30
England Claims Antarctica (1820)
January 31
Stewart Udall, Secretary of Interior, Born (1920)
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