Passenger Baseplates 1950 To Present
Image | First issued | Design | Slogan | Serial format | Serials issued | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1950 | White on black | |||||
1959 | Black on white | |||||
1972 | blue on white with embossed state name | none | ABC-123 | AAA-000 to ? | ||
1974 | Blue on white | |||||
1975 | blue on reflective white with screened graphic red state name and slogan | 1776 Independence Bicentennial 1976 | 123-456 | 100-000 to 499-999 | ||
1979 | blue on reflective white with screened state name | none | ABC-123 | ? to ZZZ-999 | ||
1993 | blue on reflective white with blue screened state name | none | ABC-1234 | ZZZ-9999 to ZXA-9999 | Serials progress backwards. | |
1993 | blue on reflective white with blue screened state name | none | ABC-1234 | ZXA-9999 to XYX-1000 | Serials progress backwards. | |
July 2002 | blue on reflective white with blue screened state name, blue slogan and ship outline | 1607 400th Anniversary 2007 | ABC-1234 | exclusively from JAA-0000 to JAX-9999 intermittently from JAY-0000 to JDC-9999 |
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2003 | blue on reflective white with red screened state name, slogan and ship outline | ABC-1234 | intermittently from JAY-0000 to JDC-9999 exclusively from JDD-0000 to KCW-9999 |
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2006 | blue on reflective white with red screened state name and multi-colored Jamestown logo | Jamestown: America's 400th Anniversary | ABC-1234 | KCX-0000 to KNP-9999 | ||
2008 | blue on reflective white with blue screened state name | none | ABC-1234 | XYX-1000 to present | Serials progress backwards. |
Read more about this topic: Vehicle Registration Plates Of Virginia
Famous quotes containing the words passenger and/or present:
“Every American travelling in England gets his own individual sport out of the toy passenger and freight trains and the tiny locomotives, with their faint, indignant, tiny whistle. Especially in western England one wonders how the business of a nation can possibly be carried on by means so insufficient.”
—Willa Cather (18761947)
“An immoderate fondness for dress, for pleasure, and for sway, are the passions of savages; the passions that occupy those uncivilized beings who have not yet extended the dominion of the mind, or even learned to think with the energy necessary to concatenate that abstract train of thought which produces principles.... that women from their education and the present state of civilized life, are in the same condition, cannot ... be controverted.”
—Mary Wollstonecraft (17591797)