First Auto Policy Sold 110 Years Ago

By | March 10, 2008

February 27, 2008, marked a significant anniversary in the history of insurance: 110 years since the first auto insurance policy.

That policy was sold in 1898 by Travelers Insurance Co. to Dr. Truman Martin of Buffalo, N.Y., according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The policy gave Martin $5,000 in liability coverage. At the time, Martin would likely have been more concerned with crashing into one of the country’s 18 million horses, rather than another of the 4,000 cars in the U.S.

Oh, how times have changed. More than a century later, cars and trucks outnumber horses 237 million to 9 million.

Martin’s 1898 policy, which gave him coverage well below what most insurers would consider appropriate, cost $12.25.

In today’s dollars, that would be about $316.25.

Today, the average car costs about $821 a year to insure.

Topics Auto

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Insurance Journal Magazine March 10, 2008
March 10, 2008
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