Skip to main content

United States. Interstate Commerce Commission

 Organization

Biography

Est. 1887, abolished 1995. The United States Interstate Commerce Commission was estabilshed as an independent agency by the Interstate Commerce Act (24 Stat. 379) on February 4, 1887 to regulate carriers engaged in transportation in interstate commerce and in foreign commerce within the United States. The ICC was abolished on December 29, 1995, by 109 Stat. 932. Successor agencies include: Surface Transportation Board, and the Department of Transportation.

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

Dominick report. ICC agrees to depositions, 1968 April 18

 Item
Identifier: M085.10.0199.00006
Abstract An unidentified announcer delivers the Dominick report, a weekly radio address summarizing news events for Colorado residents, on April 17, 1968 in Washington, D.C. The announcer discusses efforts by Senators Peter H. Dominick (R-Colo.) and Gordon L. Allott (R-Colo.) and Representative Donald G. Brotzman (R-Colo.) to force the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) to hold public hearings in Colorado on recent passenger train discontinuances that would negatively impact the state. He reads a...
Dates: 1968 April 18

Filtered By

  • Subject: Radio journalists X