An Act to aid in the development of a unified and integrated system of transportation for the National Capital region; to create a temporary National Capital Transportation Agency; to authorize the creation of a National Capital Transportation Corporation; to authorize negotiation to create an interstate transportation agency; and for other purposes.
The National Capital Transportation Agency (NCTA) was created in 1960 by an Act of Congress during the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower to comprehensively plan different modes of transportation in the Washington, D.C. area. John F. Kennedy appointed Darwin Stolzenbach as administrator of the NCTA, which laid the groundwork for the Washington Metro System.[1]
In 1967 the NCTA was abolished and its functions, duties, property, and records were transferred to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority.[2]
References
^U.S. National Capital Transportation Agency, Transportation in the National Capital Region: Finance and Organization, 1962 DCPL.