The Answer:
For the answer to this question, we turned to Michael L.
Bromley, author of William
Howard Taft and the First Motoring Presidency,
1909–1913. He graciously provided the
following information:
In November of 1899, William McKinley became
the first president to ride in an
automobile, a Locomobile steam carriage driven by its
inventor, F.O. Stanley, at Washington, D.C. McKinley is known to have
taken at least two more auto rides, one in Patterson, New Jersey, in
April, 1900, and another in July of 1901 at his home at Canton,
Ohio.
In August of 1902, President Theodore Roosevelt took
the first public automobile ride by a president during a parade at
Hartford, Connecticut, in a Columbia electric car. In 1907, the Secret Service began to
use two White steamers borrowed from the Army to shuttle visitors to
and from the railroad station near his Oyster Bay, New York, home
where he resided for the summers. While there was no official
appropriation for this use, when Roosevelt used the cars on occasion,
he became the first president to ride in a U.S.
Government automobile. Overall, Roosevelt made known his
preference for horses, and he always used horse and carriage for state
purposes.
In January of 1909, legislation was entered into Congress on
behalf of president-elect William Howard Taft for the
appropriation of official White House automobiles. After some
discussion and initial rejection of the funding by the Senate, that
February the Congress authorized $12,000 for the purpose. Taft
arranged for the purchase of a 40-horsepower White steam touring car
and a 48-horsepower six-cylinder Pierce-Arrow limousine, both of which
he tested prior to his inauguration. Although he rode in a horse-drawn
carriage to and from his March 4, 1909 inauguration, he took the first official ride by a President in a White House
automobile that evening in the Pierce-Arrow limousine to
and from the inaugural ball. Taft's enthusiasm for the technology,
especially in contrast to Roosevelt's known distaste for it, changed
the political culture of automobile and brought about a national craze
for the machines.
For more information on the presidents, visit our Biographies of the
Presidents.
—The Editors
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