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» Wednesday, June 01, 2005

Locked Horns

A short history of New York's nefarious noisemakers

Sunday morning, 8:30. As I open the front door and step outside, the beautiful morning is shattered by a Lincoln Towncar pulling up across the street, blasting its horn as it slows to a stop. What kind of legislative, police or vigilante action would it take to get these car-service slobs to use a doorbell or phone? I strap on my bike helmet and roll out into the street. With a dull, feral mindlessness on his face, the limo driver gives it another blast.

The New York City soundscape is utterly defined by the automobile horn. Stop, close your eyes and listen, even in an ostensibly quiet place like Central Park, and you will discover that the racket of tens of thousands of aggravated motorists pounding on their steering wheels is the city's omnipresent soundtrack. If man has casually introduced a more useless and destructive technology into the daily life of the city, I don't know it.

Like most bad ideas, the horn sprung from good intentions. In the mid-1800s, as steam carriages became popular in England, public outcry resulted in the 1865 passage of the "Red Flag Act." The law specified that all motorized vehicles be preceded by a man on foot carrying a flag during the day or a lantern at night. Clearly impractical, it was not long before motorists could choose from a variety of signaling devices including bells, whistles and small hand-squeezed bulb horns.

As is still the case today, the first New York drivers preferred horn to brakes. A 1900 New York Tribune item tells the story of a nurse struck and killed by an automobile. According to the account, the driver didn't slow down or steer out of the way, but "considered his responsibility fully discharged by ringing the gong."

As cars grew in popularity, the futility of honking became increasingly apparent. After the turn of the century, the bulb horn, popular in France, became the standard in most American cities. First hailed as being more "novel and penetrating" than a bell, "any usefulness that the horn had was quickly negated by the fact that people in cities were constantly tooting at one another," according to Dr. Eugene Garfield, in his essential 1983 essay, "The Tyranny of the Horn."

After 1910, motoring periodicals began calling for more effective warning devices and manufacturers were quick to oblige, developing a new generation of ear-shattering noisemakers. One of the more popular accessories of the teens and 20s was an electrically powered air horn called the Klaxon, the name derived from the Greek word klaxo, meaning "to shriek." The technological forefather of modern honkers, the Klaxon was touted as "the only horn which would instantly move cows and bullocks."

Today's horns are not designed with the crowded canyons of New York City in mind. They are engineered to travel great distances on fast-moving highways and to penetrate the increasingly soundproof cockpits of luxury vehicles. The horn is also considered a critical component of the automotive brand experience. As American vehicles have grown bigger and more intimidating, so too have their monosyllabic "voices." Until the mid-1960s, many car horns were tuned to the musical notes E-flat and C, a combination deemed pleasing to the ear. Most manufacturers have today moved to discordant combinations like F-sharp and A-sharp. In New York City, the horn has essentially become a sanctioned form of aggravated aural assault. The unfortunate results, of course, are incidents like this:

I pulled my bike up alongside the driver's- side window and hopped off. I asked the limo driver who he was honking for. He shrugged and began rolling up his window. I pressed down on the top edge of the glass. The power window's motor made a clunking noise. I leaned in and, at the top of my lungs bellowed, "Hoooonnnk! Honk honk honk!"

Enraged, the limo driver swatted at my face and yanked at his handle as I continued to honk at him. With all my weight braced against the door, he couldn't open it. Desperate to throttle me, he hurled himself against the door until, finally, I let it go. He burst out headlong. He was surprisingly quick and wiry. As he came up at me, I got my hands on either side of his head, reared back and smashed him in the middle of the face with my forehead.

The crack of bone reverberated so loudly in my head, I thought I broke my nose. But I was fine. The limo driver collapsed ass-first in the street, hands cupped over his face, staring up at me in shock. As blood burbled between his fingers his throat released a girlish, Klaxon-like squeal. I dusted off and picked up my bike as a guy appeared pulling a small suitcase on wheels. It looked like he was going to the airport.

"Your car is here," I said.

Editor's note: No police report has been filed and no witnesses have come forward to confirm the author's account of the beating. We believe the author may simply be working out some violent anti-honking wish-fulfillment issues.




Comments

You might not want to admit to your altercations online.

Also you might attempt a slightly less confrontational method of protest.

Good advice. Perhaps haiku poetry could be used as an alternative to beating honking limo drivers to a bloody pulp in the middle of the street.

http://www.honku.org

Horns have practically no use. Car alarms have even less than that.

One motorist who honks is usually expressing anger at some other motorist ahead who is too slow or stopped for no reason. The point of honking is to annoy the motorist ahead, but in the process, tens of uninvolved people -- nearby building occupants, pedestrians and cyclists, all get annoyed as well. In fact, the person most oblivious to the noise is the driver at whom it is aimed -- because he or she's got that soundproof interior.

If motorists were aware of how much angst they caused to bystanders, they'd use their brakes more and their horns less. But actually, having driven around New York City a bit from time to time, I've found that many professional drivers (particularly those odious black car drivers but also a good number of yellow cab hacks) will flash their high beams before honking. This alerts the driver without broadcasting angst to the world.

How about a campaign to accompany Mayor Bloomberg's anti-noise pollution drive: "Flash before you honk."

That Eugene Garfield essay has a great rundown of the anti-honking initiative that NYC conducted in, I forget, the 50s or 60s. Apparently, it really worked for a short time. So, getting NYC motorists to be civil is doable.

Additionally, since so many of the city's motorists are professional and licensed. Cabs, limos, and trucks can all be regulated, trained, and held accountable much more easily than private drivers.

Perhaps in my next life I'll work on this one... Though, a civillian insurrection including mass beatings of honking limo drivers may be the fastest way to make change happen in this case.

Perhaps car horns should make a noise inside the car as well as outside. That way they would be used less as a means of communication and more for their intended use. They are useful but only rarely.

smashed him in the middle of the face with my forehead

Ow!

his throat released a girlish, Klaxon-like squeal

Look out for offended girls.



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