President Lyndon B. Johnson's
Remarks at the Signing of the Highway Beautification Act of
1965
October 22, 1965
Secretary Gardner, distinguished Members of the leadership
of the Congress and Members of the Congress, and all other lovers
of beauty:
America likes to think of itself as a strong and stalwart and
expanding Nation. It identifies itself gladly with the products
of its own hands. We frequently point with pride and with confidence
to the products of our great free enterprise system--management
and labor.
These are and these should be a source of pride to every American.
They are certainly the source of American strength. They are truly
the fountainhead of American wealth. They are actually a part
of America's soul.
But there is more to America than raw industrial might. And
when you go through what I have gone through the last 2 weeks
you constantly think of things like that. You no longer get your
computers in and try to count your riches.
There is a part of America which was here long before we arrived,
and will be here, if we preserve it, long after we depart: the
forests and the flowers, the open prairies and the slope of the
hills, the tall mountains, the granite, the limestone, the caliche,
the unmarked trails, the winding little streams--well, this is
the America that no amount of science or skill can ever recreate
or actually ever duplicate.
This America is the source of America's greatness. It is another
part of America's soul as well.
When I was growing up, the land itself was life. And when the
day seemed particularly harsh and bitter, the land was always
there just as nature had left it--wild, rugged, beautiful, and
changing, always changing.
And really, how do you measure the excitement and the happiness
that comes to a boy from the old swimming hole in the happy days
of yore, when I used to lean above it; the old sycamore, the baiting
of a hook that is tossed into the stream to catch a wily fish,
or looking at a graceful deer that leaps with hardly a quiver
over a rock fence that was put down by some settler a hundred
years or more ago?
How do you really put a value on the view of the night that
is caught in a boy's eyes while he is stretched out in the thick
grass watching the million stars that we never see in these crowded
cities, breathing the sounds of the night and the birds and the
pure, fresh air while in his ears are the crickets and the wind?
Well, in recent years I think America has sadly neglected this
part of America's national heritage. We have placed a wall of
civilization between us and between the beauty of our land and
of our countryside. In our eagerness to expand and to improve,
we have relegated nature to a weekend role, and we have banished
it from our daily lives.
Well, I think that we are a poorer Nation because of it, and
it is something I am not proud of. And it is something I am going
to do something about. Because as long as I am your President,
by choice of your people, I do not choose to preside over the
destiny of this country and to hide from view what God has gladly
given it.
And that is why today there is a great deal of real joy within
me, and within my family, as we meet here in this historic East
Room to sign the Highway Beautification Act of 1965.
Now, this bill does more than control advertising and junkyards
along the billions of dollars of highways that the people have
built with their money--public money, not private money. It does
more than give us the tools just to landscape some of those highways.
This bill will bring the wonders of nature back into our daily
lives.
This bill will enrich our spirits and restore a small measure
of our national greatness.
As I rode the George Washington Memorial Parkway back to the
White House only yesterday afternoon, I saw nature at its purest.
And I thought of the honor roll of names--a good many of you are
sitting here in the front row today--that made this possible.
And as I thought of you who had helped and stood up against private
greed for public good, I looked at those dogwoods that had turned
red, and the maple trees that were scarlet and gold. In a pattern
of brown and yellow, God's finery was at its finest. And not one
single foot of it was marred by a single, unsightly, man-made
construction or obstruction--no advertising signs, no old, dilapidated
trucks, no junkyards. Well, doctors could prescribe no better
medicine for me, and that is what I said to my surgeon as we drove
along.
This bill does not represent everything that we wanted. It
does not represent what we need. It does not represent what the
national interest requires. But it is a first step, and there
will be other steps. For though we must crawl before we walk,
we are going to walk.
I remember the fierce resolve of a man that I admired greatly,
a great leader of a great people, Franklin D. Roosevelt. He fought
a pitched battle in 1936 with private interests whose target was
private gain. And I shall long remember the words that I believe
he echoed at Madison Square Garden, when he declared to the Nation
that the forces of selfishness had not only met their match, but
these forces had met their master.
Well, I have not asked you to come here today to tell you that
I have a desire to master anyone. But until the clock strikes
the last hour of the time allotted to me as President by vote
of all the people of this country, I will never turn away from
the duty that my office demands or the vigilance that my oath
of office requires.
And this administration has no desire to punish or to penalize
any private industry, or any private company, or any group, or
any organization of complex associations in this Nation. But we
are not going to allow them to intrude their own specialized private
objective on the larger public trust. Beauty belongs to all the
people. And so long as I am President, what has been divinely
given to nature will not be taken recklessly away by man.
This Congress is to be thanked for the bill that you have given
us. I wish it could have been more, but I realize, too, that there
are other views to be considered in our system of checks and balances.
The grandchildren of those of you in this country that may
have mocked and ridiculed us today, someday will point with pride
to the public servants who are here in this room, who cast their
lot with the people.
And unless I miss my guess, history will remember on its honor
roll those of you whom the camera brings into focus in this room
today, who stood up and were counted when that roll was called
that said we are going to preserve at least a part of what God
gave us.
Thank you very much.
NOTE: The President spoke at 2:16 p.m. in the East Room at
the White House. In his opening words he referred to John W. Gardner,
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare.
As enacted, the Highway Beautification Act of 1965 is Public
Law 89-285 (79 Stat. 1028).
On August 13, 1965, the White House made public a report to
the President from the Secretary of the Interior announcing his
order restricting outdoor advertising on public lands adjacent
to highways.
The report stated, "I am pleased to report that I am issuing
orders extending to 1,000 feet the minimum distance any billboards
or advertising displays can be placed on public lands administered
by this Department's Bureau of Land Management.
"The 1,000-foot minimum still permits us to bar any such
signs, regardless of the distance, and is established for those
acceptable signs that are not eyesores or do not otherwise impair
the natural view by the public. The present restriction is 660
feet? (1 Weekly Comp. Pres. Docs., p. 91)
On November 4, 1965, the White House announced the first allocation
of Federal funds to the States under the highway beautification
program. The sum of $6 million was allocated for the control of
junkyards and outdoor advertising, and $60 million was allocated
for landscaping and scenic enhancement.
The release stated that funds would be expended under procedures of the cooperative
Federal-State highway program. The States, which would initiate projects and
supervise the work, would later be reimbursed for 75 percent of the costs
of controlling outdoor advertising and junkyards and for 100 percent of the
cost of landscaping work (1 Weekly Comp. Pres. Docs., p. 459).
Source: Public Papers of the Presidents of the United
States: Lyndon B. Johnson, 1965. Volume II, entry 576, pp. 1072-1075.
Washington, D. C.: Government Printing Office, 1966.
Last Updated
June 6, 2007
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