I remember hearing that it had to do with pilgrimages.
As the adage goes - all roads lead to Rome. Therefore, as you were travelling to Rome to visit the Vatican/Pope, you had to be on the left (in latin - sinister). The right side (remembering the orientation that roads led to Rome) could be used by those who had made their pilgrimage because they were no longer 'sinister'.
As said by John, above, in the wake of the American Revolution they sought to overturn the Old Ways (tm) and so changed the side to drive on, and spelling (actually, I believe they had a go at inventing a whole new language so they could move away from the perfidious English, but it never caught on). Although they did stick with Imperial measurements - metric was too complicated, presumably.
As the adage goes - all roads lead to Rome. Therefore, as you were travelling to Rome to visit the Vatican/Pope, you had to be on the left (in latin - sinister). The right side (remembering the orientation that roads led to Rome) could be used by those who had made their pilgrimage because they were no longer 'sinister'.
As said by John, above, in the wake of the American Revolution they sought to overturn the Old Ways (tm) and so changed the side to drive on, and spelling (actually, I believe they had a go at inventing a whole new language so they could move away from the perfidious English, but it never caught on). Although they did stick with Imperial measurements - metric was too complicated, presumably.