ST. GEORGES BRIDGE
COLLISION IN 1939
FACTS
Captain John Lloyd
Reynolds , master of the freighter Waukegan, and the Delaware Bay
and River Pilot, Captain
Leroy F. Taylor, testified that every precaution had been taken
to avoid a mishap when
the Waukegan struck the St. Georges Bridge over the Delaware
and Chesapeake Canal on 20
January, 1939.
At a hearing of their
accusation of inattention of duty by the Bureau of Marine
Inspection & Navigation
Captain Reynolds had made it known that there had been malicious
tampering with the
steering apparatus discovered while the Waukegan was south bound
in the Delaware River, and he had the steering room locked,
ordered a series of test which indicated the ship was
functioning perfectly. The Captain had anchored the vessel at the
entrance to the canal, took
aboard additional water ballast and out the vessel through another
series of test. On a
straight section and on two curves the ship responded to it;s
helm, but
up the canal on a slight
left curve the vessel went out of control heading straight for the
bridge. He dropped both
my port and starboard anchors, reversed engines, everything I
could do to ease the
impact.
Captain Taylor, of the
Delaware Bay and River Pilots , testified both he and the master
gave their whole attention to navigating the ship from the time it
sailed from Philadelphia to the time it nosed into the bridge and
toppled it into the canal.
Abstract 08/18/18 by
HARRISON H, from Wilmington Morning News , Tuesday,
August 15, 1939 for
www.iinni.blogspot.com
and Facebook.
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