I remember the Sunshine Skyway disaster in 1980. I was on my way to the lot when the news came on the radio that the bridge was down. I was not in a rush that day, so I drove to Fort Desoto Park. From the south beach, the Summit Venture that collided with the bridge could be seen with part of the bridge hanging over its bow.
That Yellow 1976 Buick Skylark that stopped just before driving into Tampa Bay belonged to a car dealer I knew. His name was Dick Hornbuckle, and he was a wholesaler at St Petersburg’s Apollo Auto Sales. Ole Hornbuckle had a set of titanium *****, and after getting out of the car and running a safe distance away. He remembers his Gold Cubs in the trunk and returned to retrieve them. I’d still be running south!
Catalyst Reports: It was the Friday before Mother’s Day, and six students from Alabama’s Tuskegee University were traveling home to Florida together. After their long journey, they were ready to get off the Greyhound bus, stretch their weary legs, breathe the fresh air, and hug their moms. Fifteen minutes after they departed the St. Petersburg station, they were all dead. The ship Summit Venture crashed into the Skyway Bridge.
A major bridge in Baltimore in the US state of Maryland collapsed after a container ship collided with it early on Tuesday, sending several vehicles into the chilly waters. Rescuers pulled out two survivors and were searching for more in the Patapsco River after reports that a 948ft Singapore-flagged container ship leaving port on its way to Sri Lanka had crashed into the 1.6-mile (2.57-km) Francis Scott Key Bridge,