Why didn't "they" use it originally?. A new young country peopled with those from Europe. Right? When was the metric system created and isn't that what the folks who arrived here already using and familiar with?
Google’s answer kind of oversimplifies it. First of all, it’s unpopular. The polling on switching to the metric system is only 21% in favor of it. That’s kind of a hard sell for politicians. In fact, politicians who support it usually don’t get very far. Lincoln Chafee is one of them. It was part of his platform when he was running for the Democratic nomination for President in 2016. He had a good platform. I agreed with all of the points on his platform, but he got a whopping <1% of the vote.
George H.W. Bush was another politician who supported switching to the metric system. He even signed an executive order mandating it. He was also a single-term President. If George H.W. Bush would’ve won re-election, our road signs would be in metric, but the trade-off is that we might still be poking along at 110 km/h on freeways outside of cities and 90 km/h on all other highways.
George H.W. Bush’s executive order would’ve had us on the metric system by 1995, in which case I would have no memory of ever using anything other than metric. When Bill Clinton was President, Congress sent him a bill to both undo the executive order on the metric system and repeal the national speed limit of 65 on freeways outside of cities and 55 on all other highways.
Bill Clinton signed it, so no metric system, but we’re also not creeping along at painfully low speed limits. Most states aren’t anyway. The only states that never increased their speed limits after the repeal of the national speed limit are Vermont, New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Jersey and Delaware.