ChatterBank1 min ago
Driving on the "wrong" side of the road?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Japan, Australia, South Africa, Ireland to name a few wrong siders. . check out this link:
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Valley/8414/drive-rig ht.htm
Read the text of the link posted by MC HP.
"....a world permanently divided between countries that drive right (about 3.5 billion people) and those that drive left (about 2.5 billion)."
There is no right and wrong - it's just the way it happened. It's nothing to do with "stubborn Brits".
Your original question has been asked on Answerbank two or three times recently. If you do a search, you may find some other links explaining the "right and left" differences. It is interesting to note that some countries changed sides relatively recently (Austria & Sweden for example) while some parts of the US used to drive on the left while others drove on the right! There is also at least one country where they used to drive on the right, then changed to the left, then changed back to the right again.
Someone also recently asked what happens at the land borders between "right" and "left" countries.
Britain has been driving on the left for 2000 years, proof is in ancient cart tracks ground to a quarry where the grooves worn in the rocks were deep on the left side coming out, showing the laden carts came out on the left.
Its likely everyone - at least in the area covered by the Roman empire - drove on the left up until the time of Napolean (a left hander) who decreed that his troops would henceforth march on the right. Napoleans empire covered much of mainland Europe. After he was removed they didn't revert back, and contiguous countries found it easier to switch, Sweden only doing so in 1967.
The America's illegally rebelled against their rightful King, and were aided by the French. The US had a great affinity with France then and adopted many French customs (including decimal currency) and rejecting British traditions.
Look at countries outside the French/American influence and see how many drive on the left, including far off, and cut off for many years, Japan
I may be wrong, but I seem to recall that it was Napoleon Bonaparte who first introduced 'riding' on the right of the road.
Basically he did it to be bloody-minded after losing at Waterloo and the french carried on with that tradition. Other nations with french ties followed suit and continued to do so after the introduction of the motor vehicle.
I don't know why the USA adopted the French format - you would expect them to follow Britain?