Nov/Dec 2021 edition Issue #19 AutoMobilia Resource Magazine Photos and story by Michael Wiener Governor #1 Plates from US Territories/ Possessions/ NWT Canada Premier / Presidential plates from Haiti, Guatemala, El Salvador: Some Rare Governor plates from US Territories and Possessions; Northwest Territories Canadian Premier bear shaped, and Presidential plates from Haiti, Guatemala and El Salvador. Politicians and elected officials have for many years sported colorful special low-numbered plates, some of which are illustrated here and are very sought after by collectors. In most states the No. 1 plate is assigned to the Governor’s limousine, while No. 2 is provided to the Lieutenant Governor. North Dakota has a unique approach to providing low numbers to their elected officials, as their Governor gets plates No. 1 and 5, while the state’s senior U.S. Senator receives plate No. 2, the junior U.S. Senator gets plate No. 3 and the lone at-large Congressman is issued plate No. 4. The Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota receives plate No. 6.
At a recent auction, several of the Georgia special plates bearing the initials “FDR” and “FDR 1,” once used by President Franklin D. Roosevelt at his Warm Springs, Georgia, winter home, sold for $10,000 each. For many years the government of Washington, D.C., reserved the plates numbered 100 and 101 for official vehicles used by the President, and plate No. 111 was reserved for the Vice President. Inaugural plates have been produced every four years since 1933, with No. 1 going to the Presidential vehicle and No. 2 to the Vice President; these were typically used only in the Inauguration Day motorcade.
Where do I find low-numbered plates? I travel a great deal to plate meets all over the country, and I write thousands of letters a year to people who have the specific plates I desire. Among my favorites are those that belonged to and were actually used by governors in the 1920s and ’30s – especially the 1935 Territory of Hawaii No. 1 plate. Michael Wiener To read more great columns like this one from License Plate Expert Michael Wiener...
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Sep/Oct 2021 edition Issue #18 AutoMobilia Resource Magazine Photos and story by Michael Wiener I began collecting license plates in 1972, right after graduating high school and making my first cross-country trip. As an active member of the Automobile License Plate Collectors Association (ALPCA) for 49 years, I got hooked on collecting political plates, from the first time I observed low-number political plates during a visit to Washington, D.C. To me they are very unique.
Of course, anything coveted and derived from official governmental action is apt to be turned into a reward for political support. So, it was in the early part of the 20th century, that low-number license plates became a way for politicians to say “thank you” by conveying favored status to the holders of such plates in the eyes of the powers that be. Law enforcement was likely to think twice before ticketing a motorist displaying a low-numbered plate. New York low numbers / some Political Types: Some Rare and Historic plates from the Empire State. 1937 “NYC” was issued and used by NY City’s most famous Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, the 1951 #1 was used by Governor Thomas E. Dewey, 1963 #1 from Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, #4 and #5 were issued to former NY Governor’s after they left office. Photo by Michael Wiener. Massachusetts drivers have had a strange obsession with low-number license plates from the very beginning, nearly 120 years ago, as a point of pride and to highlight their Bay State family lineage. Governor Michael Dukakis continued the trend of handing out low-number combinations to political supporters – until a week before he decided to run for President. Then he fired his Registrar of Motor Vehicles, Alan Mackey, for giving out low-number plates to friends and relatives and instituted a very popular Low Plate Lottery, where any Massachusetts motorist is now given an equal chance to get a low-numbered plate, bringing the political favoritism tradition to an end. Look for more political plates in Part II! Michael Wiener To read more great columns like this one from License Plate Expert Michael Wiener...
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License Plate CollectingMichael Wiener is a world-renowned license plate expert, collector, researcher, and consultant. ArchivesCategories |