Do you remember the day the Pocomoke River Bridge fell? My telephone rang very early that morning to tell me the news. I will admit I didn't really believe it until I saw it for myself! For some reason, very early in the morning the little bridge just came tumbling down. And of course, for months there were the rumors and speculations of how it could fall, who was the last to travel it and how remarkable it was no one had been killed.
My news clippings from the Pocomoke paper are gone but I did find these pictures that were taken 2 days after it collapsed. There isn't much on the internet but I did find some interesting information.......
Md. Eastern Shore Bridge Collapses
Article from: The Washington Post Article date: August 18, 1988 Author: Paul Valentine
A two-lane bridge over the Pocomoke River collapsed early this morning, causing no known injuries, but drawing top Maryland highway officials to this town to dispel fears that the state's bridges are becoming dangerous.
Two 36-foot spans of the 285-foot-long bridge tumbled into the river about 1 a.m., officials said, just after a car had crossed it. Maryland troopers rushed to the scene at the edge of this Eastern Shore town and closed off traffic within minutes, officials said.
The cause of the mishap was still not known late today, ...
Well, that was not all I found. Two days before the collapse of span, a motorist traveling west to east noticed a dip in the bridge deck and that the pedestrian crosswalk railing ,in places,| Direct Links | Movies world | Software world | Download PC Games | Mediafire Links | Celebrity Pictures seemed to bowed downward. The same motorist on August 16,1988 crossed the bridge again and notice the dip in the bridge had become more severe. He naturally assumed that the bridge tenders were aware of it and didn't feel the need to report it to anyone. ( I would assume that too). And the manager of the market on the Somerset side of the bridge noticed the same thing
on those same two days.
August 16, 1988, around 11:00 a.m. another motorist noticed
a "V" shaped depression that traveled 10 to 12 inches deep and about 20 ft. long. This wasn't all he found to be faulty with the bridge and immediately drove to Pocomoke City Police Dept. and reported it to the dispatcher. The dispatcher did not notify the officers on duty nor was it logged in as a complaint on the police log.
Finally that afternoon another motorist noticed it and contacted the police chief. The police chief stated that all he saw was a pothole, and did not inspect any other sections of the bridge.
The report further stated that the police department is not trained in matters of bridge construction and defaults................And even though the tiny bridge would have collapsed anyway, IF someone had perhaps paid more attention to what these 3 people were saying that bridge could have been shut down and eliminated the possibility of personal injury or even death. No, personal injury did not occur. But it sure could have.
To read the entire report go to www.ntsb.gov/recs/letter Quite interesting. I worked downtown for over 25 years and never heard any of this. I don't know of anyone at the time that had heard about this report written in January of 1990. Be sure to read it. Another DUH moment.
It's amazing that as many vehicles that cross the bridge coming and going that it fell while not a vehicle in sight. Amazing? Miracle? Luck?
ReplyDeleteI just realized, it's been 21 years???
ReplyDeletegeeze..... seams like it was just a couple of years ago
I was a sergeant in the Maryland State Police, assigned as midnight - 0800 shift commander when a citizen catted me at the Berlin Barrack and told me the Market Street bridge had collapsed.
ReplyDeleteI immediately called Trooper 1/C Ernie Davis who was working South Worcester and told him. "I just crossed it!" he told me.
I had TFC Davis block traffic on the Somerset side and then notified Pocomoke PD and Larry Powell, resident engineer at SHA.
Thankfully nobody was hurt, although a woman reportedly bounced off the bridge and on to the land as the span fell. (I can't confirm this.)
CALLED not catted. Sorry.
ReplyDelete