A question came to mind as school bus drivers prepared to start their engines on Wednesday on 7,700 public-school routes in New York City and end their monthlong strike: Why are most school buses yellow
Why not some other color Why not burnt sienna, like a crayon Why not light-medium robinâs egg blue, like a jewelry box Why not magma orange, like a Lamborghini
The answer is Frank W. Cyr, a professor at Teachers College, Columbia University, who became known as the âfather of the yellow school busâ for research he led in the 1930s.
Dr. Cyr, who died at 95 in 1995, had traveled the country, surveying pupil transportation in an era when school buses cost $2,000 apiece but differed widely from manufacturer to manufacturer and jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Some states had safety standards; some left the task to local school districts. âIn ! many cases, standards have been set up by more or less hit-and-miss methods,â according to an account that Dr. Cyr oversaw.
Then, in the spring of 1939, he called together educators, school bus manufacturers and paint experts for a conference that approved the nationâs first school bus safety standards â" 42 pages covering everything from axles, batteries and emergency brakes to the inside height of the passenger compartment to, yes, the color that the world saw outside. The standards were published in a booklet with a yellow cover: the yellow was the color the group had chosen.
âThey wanted a color that would stand out, that other drivers could see from a distance and that would be identified with a school bus so whenever we saw it, weâd think, thereâs a group of kids going someplace,â said Frank Cyrâs son, William. âBefore that, they sent kids to school in anything.â
Buses, trucks and even horse-drawn wagons carried schoolchildren in those days. Some buses were paintedin drab colors. Some administrators suggested red, white and blue, apparently not to make the buses more visible but to make the passengers more patriotic.
For his part, Frank Cyr understood the importance of standardization. âFor every different color,â he recalled in 1989, âthe bus companies had to have different booths to spray-paint them.â
Yellow was hard to miss, even in weather so bad your mother made you wear galoshes. But which yellow This is like asking what color is the White House.
âI remember as a kid, he had color samples,â William Cyr said. âHe had a desk at home in his study and he would lay the samples out across his desk and look at them. He would talk about the samples as being orange. As I remember it, they were a gradation from orange over to a pale yellow.â
At the conference in 1939, he displayed 50 shades of yellow, from a deep, lemony yellow to a deep orange-red. He recalled in 1989 that the group appointed a committee of education offici! als to ma! ke the final color choice.
âThe color they selected was and remains ânational school bus chrome,ââ said Bob Riley, executive director of the National Association of State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services. âI donât know why the word âchromeâ was in there, but it has something do with the makeup of that paint.â
The most recent version of the standards, approved in 2010, calls the color ânational school bus yellow,â and Mr. Riley said there is a specific formula for it.
âIâve seen it,â he said, alluding to the formula. âWe used to have it on our Web site. I think we dropped it off the Web site because nobody ever asked for it.â But, he added, âYou canât buy a bus that doesnât meet that formula.â
Other specifications adopted at the school-bus conference have been revised over the years, but not the yellow, even though it is a relic from before the eye-popping palettes of artists like Andy Warhol and Peter Max.
âIf they had to do i today, who knows if it would be the same, because now they have brighter, more noticeable things,â Mr. Riley said. âThink of the vests highway workers wear. Obviously, theyâre even more noticeable than national school bus chrome yellow. But the rationale for maintaining that color is its universal acceptance. Weâve all been born and raised knowing what that is.â
William Cyr said he remembered asking his father, âIf youâre the father of the yellow school bus, what does that make meâ
Frank Cyr had a ready answer: Anytime William saw a school bus, he could announce, âThere goes one of my brothers.â