The Sunshine Skyway
Bridge Disaster
May 9, 1980

On the
morning of May 9th,1980 at 07:38, during a violent rain squall producing high
winds and almost zero visibility the empty phosphate freighter SUMMIT VENTURE
piloted by Captain John Lerro slammed into the #2 South pier ( over 700 feet
from the center of the channel ) of the southbound (1970) span , it knocked 1261
feet of center span, cantilever , approach and roadway into Tampa Bay.
Thirty-five people , most of them on board a Greyhound bus bound for Miami
plunged 150 feet to their deaths in what is now one of the worst bridge
disasters in history. Rescue crews and divers were immediately dispatched to the
scene, but of the victims who made the fall there was only one survivor , whose
truck had luckily landed on the deck of the SUMMIT VENTURE. There was one other
lucky guy - the picture is here - Richard Horbuckle - his car was on the verge
of falling off, 14 inches from death, screeching to a halt just shy of plunging
into the bay. He crawled up the dangling span to safety. For years after he
still had to traverse across the bridge everyday to work. Think of that!
Basically people going to work and riding on a bus plunged into the bay. There
was a thick fog and rain - going over this bridge they had no idea. This bridge
was a metal span - riding on it if you looked out the window of the car down you
could see the water. Driving over it - it made the vibrating sound that cars
traveling over metal make. For years as they reconstructed the new bridge, you
drove over the still standing other span - and the half of the span that didnt
fall was still there, dangling at the end. I was a very little kid at this point
in history and it always scared the HELL out of me.
There was this book - SKYWAY - put out by the St. Pete Times and there was
always one around the house. It had morbid pictures of the cars being pulled
from the bay, bodies dangling, bodies being pulled onto boats, half nude,
bloated - it was awful and my dark mind was drawn to it even then - I want to
find one of those books. It was sold at convenience stores for a buck and was
only about 30 pages with big print and way too many photographs for a young
child to see.
Anyone who knows about the bridges collapse cannot drive across the bridge
without thinking about it. When I was little and we had to go across the bridge
to pick someone up at the airport, I would whimper and whine and lay on the
floor of the car. No kidding.

The Accident
The Story From The Newspaper
They probably never met, Chip Callaway and Gerta Hedquist. Never
nodded or smiled or even made eye contact. They had, after all, no mutual
friends, no shared interests.
He was 20, an exceptional college student, on the school tennis team, standing
on the brink of his life.
She was 92, stiffening with advanced arthritis, planning another trip to her
native Sweden, undoubtedly the last given her growing physical limitations.
They had nothing in common at all.
Except, as they settled into their Greyhound bus seats, heading south under gray
and threatening skies, they were about to die together.
At 7:25 a.m. on May 9, 1980, with the Greyhound approaching Pinellas Point a few
miles from the north end of the Sunshine Skyway Bridge, Capt. John Lerro tensed
at the helm of the freighter Summit Venture, a ship as long as two football
fields.
Lerro, 37, an experienced harbor pilot from Tampa, shouldered the responsibility
of guiding the Summit Venture from the Gulf of Mexico 58.4 miles up Tampa Bay to
the Port of Tampa. It is one of the longest shipping canals in the world, and
one of the most treacherous, given the shallow waters of the bay and the ambush
style of the Florida weather.
With ships belly empty of cargo and her tanks nearly empty of ballast, she rode
high in the water.

Looking For Victims
She ran through intermittent fog and rain along the first 19
miles of her journey. Then southwest winds exploded to tropical storm force.
Rain sheeted at rates exceeded 7 inches an hour. Visibility plunged at near
zero, and shipboard radar failed.
It couldn't have happened at a worse point. Lerro faced the most critical course
change of the run, a 13-degree turn that would take him between two main piers
of the Skyway bridge.
It was almost this exact spot that Coast Guard cutter Blackthorn had been rammed
four months earlier by the tanker Capricorn. The Blackthorn sank. Twenty-three
men died.
Lerro approached the critical bend on a ship weighing nearly 20,000 tons
battered by winds of nearly 60 mph. And he approached it blind.
Anthony Gattus didn't like what he saw at all.
"It was a lousy day to start with," Gattus recalled. "It started
raining hard 2 or 3 miles before we got to the Skyway. It got really dark. I
don't like rain and cold and darkness. Didn't then. Don't now."
Gattus, now 81, was a passenger in a yellow Buick headed south with three other
men to ferry cars back for sale in Pinellas County. Richard Hornbuckle, the
owner of the Buick, was behind the wheel. Jim Crispin sat beside Hornbuckle in
the front seat. Kennith Holmes sat beside Gattus in back.
"Hornbuckle was a real good driver," Gattus said. "I always felt safe with him.
When the rain started hard, he slowed way down. Twenty. Don't think he could
have been going faster than 20 mph.
"I remember a blue pickup passed us. I remember a bus passed us."

Hornbuckle's Car - Surviving On The Edge
On the water below, Lerro considered his options.
Visibility was so bad he could no longer see the bow of his
ship. He judged it too risky to turn the Summit Venture out of the shipping
channel to the north to anchor and ride out the storm because the outbound Pure
Oil had been approaching. Without radar or visibility to locate the tanker,
Lerro feared he might ram her if he steers across her path.
If he tried to stop, or if he turned south out of the channel, the winds could
usurp control of the ship and hurl him into the bridge. Thinking the wind was
still from the southwest, his right, Lerro judged it would push the Summit
Venture safely through the main spans of the Skyway.
He made the decision to proceed. Lerro didn't know the squall had forced the
wind around to the west- northwest, his left. Instead of keeping him in the
channel, it pushed his high-riding vessel off course.
At 7:32, the weather cleared marginally. Lerro saw part of the bridge super
structure directly ahead. With heartstopping clarity, he realized he was no
longer in the shipping channel.
He ordered a series of maneuvers, including emergency reversal of the engines
and the deployment of the anchors. But it was too late.
At 7:33, the bow of the Summit Venture collided with bridge pier 2S. The pier
toppled, taking the roadway with it.
On the bridge above and in the water below, terror of such magnitude no one
could have dreamed filled the final seconds of 35 lives. In the hours that
followed, it changed dozens more lives forever.
The horror in Lerro's voice is painful to hear. Lerro:
Mayday!Mayday!Mayday! Coast Guard. Mayday!Mayday!Mayday! Coast Guard.
Coast Guard: Vessel calling Mayday, vessel in distress. This is the United
States Coast Guard, St. Petersburg, Florida. Request your position, the nature
of your distress and the number of persons on board. Over.
Lerro: Get emergency...all the emergency equipment out to the Skyway bridge.
Vessel has hit the Skyway bridge. The Skyway bridge is down! Get all the
emergency equipment out to the Skyway bridge. The Skyway bridge is down. This is
Mayday. Emergency situation. (Nearly screaming) Stop the traffic on that Skyway
bridge!
CG: This is Coast Guard St. Petersburg, roger. What size is the vessel that hit
the bridge? Over.
Lerro: It's a large vessel. Stop the traffic on the Skyway bridge. There's some
people in the water. Get emergency equipment out to the Skyway bridge. Now.
CG: This is the Coast Guard, St. Petersburg, roger. What vessel are you on?
Over.
Lerro: Summit Venture. Summit Venture.
CG: Summit Venture, Coast Guard St. Petersburg, roger. What is the size of your
vessel and can you assist? Over.
Lerro: Cannot assist. We're 606 feet long, light draft. We cannot assist here.
We're an abutment. Stop all the traffic on the bridge. Send some vessels out
here to render assistance. People are in the water.
One hundred and fifty feet above, the yellow Buick with Anthony Gattus in the
back seat began to skid. The tires fought to obey the brakes and grab traction
on the wet grating.

The Complete New Span, The Dinosaur In The Backround,
Soon To Be Destroyed
Hornbuckle, the driver, had not seen the center span of the
roadway disappear. But as his car neared the crest of the bridge, he realized
the upper superstructure was missing. That was the tip that saved their lives,
he told Gattus later. He realized something was terribly wrong and began braking
immediately. The car slowed reluctantly. It stopped with the left front tire 14
inches from oblivion.
"The doors flew open," Gattus recalled. "We all got out. We were on a sharp
incline toward the water. I stuck my fingers through the grating and began to
crawl away. I looked back, and Hornbuckle was still by the car. I yelled at him,
'What are you still doing there?" He said he was going back for his golf clubs."
Below the Buick, the Greyhound bus that carried Chip Callaway, Gerta Hedquist
and 24 other people to their deaths lay on its roof, as retired St. Petersburg
fire chief Jerry Knight recalled it, "Split open like a ripe tomato."
Also in the water was a 1980 silver Chevrolet Citation carrying
a couple from Pinellas Park, a 1979 green Chevrolet Nova carrying a man from St.
Petersburg, a 1980 light blue Ford Grenda carrying a man from Tampa, a 1975
black and yellow Ford sedan carrying a St. Petersburg couple, a 1976 white and
tan Chevrolet El Camino carrying a man from Seminole and a 1979 silver
Volkswagen Scirocco carrying a couple from Pennsville, NJ.
Autopsies revealed that 28 of the victims, including Hedquist, died from blunt
trauma injuries; seven, including Callaway, drowned.
The 1974 blue Ford Courier pickup that passed Hornbuckle had gone over the edge
as well. Along with part of the bridge, the truck fell onto the Summit Venture's
bow. The Courier then rolled into the water. The lone occupant, Wesley MacIntire,
survived.
It haunted him for the final nine years of his life that he lived when others
perished.
"We had no idea what we were dealing with until we came around (Maximo) Point
and saw the bridge down," said Bill Covert "It was horrific." For more than 20
years, Covert has run a search-and-rescue training program at Eckerd College at
the southern tip of Pinellas County. In 1980, none of the region's fire and
rescue operations were needed, the call went Covert.
Working from two boats, Covert's crew pulled seven bodies from the water, final
expressions of terror frozen on their faces.
"We were riding very low in the water, we had no capacity for bodies, and the
weather was deteriorating again," he said "We headed in for Fort De Soto Park,
where the temporary morgue was set up. We had one body strapped to the dive
platform behind the boat and had nothing to cover it with. We reported the
situation, but we were told to come in anyway." "Just as we were pulling up to
the dock, I looked up and saw a man holding his child above his head so the kid
could get a better look. It made me sick. I can't get that image out of my
mind."
When a colleague told St. Petersburg fireman Gerard Chalmers the Skyway bridge
had fallen, "I thought it was a joke, and a sick joke at that." After Chalmers,
now a district fire chief, confirmed the information, he drove to Fort De Soto.
"In my mind going down there, somebody hit the bridge, they bumped it," he said.
"Maybe a car was in the water. When I walked out onto the fishing pier and saw
it, well, it was just awesome. Unbelievable."
Chalmers made the first dive to the bottom of the main channel 60 feet below the
surface to locate vehicles and to check the current visibility. "One of the
first things I saw was a pile of rivets, like an ant hill,' he said. "They had
been sheared off. The force it would have taken, it was stunning."

Postcard Advertising The Bridge When It Was Only A
Single Span
He swam through a sea of twisted metal, like a ruined Erector
set. He found the El Camino.
"The victim was inside," Chalmers recalled. "We couldn't get him out. It was
like a high-speed crash on the interstate. I recovered his briefcase. I marked
the spot and moved on."
For years, Chalmers couldn't cross the remaining span if a ship was sailing
underneath.
"If I saw a ship, I would slow down, so I didn't get out on that center span
until the ship was gone." Memories of the disaster remain vivid.
There was so much tangled wreckage, so much impact damage to the vehicles," he
said. "And it was quiet. Very, very quite." The noise and impact from the
bridge's fall had chased all marine life away.
"I remember thinking at one point, I am the only living thing down here."
Tampa Civil lawyer Steven Yerrid reached the Summit Venture soon after the
accident, looking for Lerro. His firm, Holland and Knight, represented many of
the harbor pilots. "When I first saw the scene, this huge ship in the middle of
a carnival merry-go-round of small boats with bodies floating up, I thought I
would never forget it," Yerrid recalled. "I was right. I never have." "When I
went aboard the ship and saw John, I thought I had never seen a soul so lost."
Before they could get off the ship they ran into a gauntlet of officials wanting
to interview the pilot. "They all wanted to question him, and I understood
that," Yerrid said. "I kept telling them, 'Yes, but not today.' "
He hid Lerro, his wife and son in a hotel under the name Yerrid, where they
remained for weeks. But it didn't shield them from public reaction.
"Over the weeks and months, John heard himself called an alcoholic, a
homosexual, a murderer," Yerrid said "His life was threatened. My life was
threatened. Someone stole my Irish setter and kept her for three days. They beat
her and urinated on her and then put her back on my porch.
"That's the kinda atmosphere it was."
A state inquiry cleared Lerro of negligence. A Coast Guard inquiry found Lerro's
decision to proceed in zero visibility contributed to the crash.
But it also found a litany of situations beyond Lerro's control: The localized storm "of enormous proportions" was not forecast. The tanker Pure Oil had turned out of the storm, making way for the Summit Venture to do the same, but no one told Lerro. The pilot of a ship that had passed the Summit Venture and encountered the fierce storm never warned Lerro to expect it, though the pilot knew there were other ships in the storm's path. The position of the Summit Venture denied Lerro the chance to sense the wind had changed. "I still try to imagine what Lerro felt," said Paul Scotti, a retired Coast Guard official who ran media operations during the aftermath of the disaster. "He's standing on the bridge, and he's suddenly blind. He doesn't know where other traffic is. He thinks he's going straight but the wind is pushing him sideways.

The New Mighty Span
"It's like somebody put a black hood over his head and said, "Go
ahead, navigate now."
The Summit Venture sailed for another 13 years. She was removed from the
Liberian registry in November 1993 at the age of 27, and there is no record of
her since.
The new Sunshine Skyway, connecting Pinellas and Manatee counties, is a model of
grace. It leans to the west, its golden superstructure appearing like two sails
steering the bridge to the sea.
It opened in 1987, four lanes of traffic on a single span. It
rises to 196 feet above the water, nearly 50 feet higher than the old Skyway.
But its grade is less precipitous, and many drivers take comfort that they don't
have to look through a steel-grate roadbed to the water so many feet below.
The channel passage beneath the new bridge has been widened from 800 to 1200
feet. And the new bridge was constructed farther away from that treacherous
13-degree turn in the channel that the Summit Venture failed to negotiate. But
the channel was never straightened, a fact that surprises Knight, the former
fire chief.
"That turn played a major role in two tragic accidents," Knight said. The bridge
structure is hollow concrete, far stronger than the steel of the old Skyway. The
pilings that provide the bridge's toehold in the bay are surrounded by doughnuts
of boulders and guarded by 36 bumpers, called dolphins. The bumpers range from
47 to 64 feet in diameter, giant rounds of concrete wrapped in heavy wooden
planks, all sitting on beds of rock. From above the dolphins look like a giant
game of pinball. They are meant to deflect or ground errant ships, and they do
that job often.
A recent examination found that nearly every one of the dolphins had been
rammed, even those 70 and 80 yards from the shipping channel. Just last feb. 6,
a shrimper hit one of the dolphins and sank.
Rockbars extend 200 feet from the main pilings toward the direction from which
traffic is supposed to approach the bridge, and so far, everything has worked.
So far, the bridge is undamaged by traffic. Are the protections enough to keep
the 1980 tragedy from happening again?
"It sounds foolproof, but a ship with a large overhang above the water line
could have the hull run aground and still have the reach to hit a piling," said
J. Michael Buffington, who has been a Tampa Bay harbor pilot for nearly 20 years
and sits on the state Board of Pilot Commissioners.
"It's just a very tough bay to negotiate," Buffington said. "It might be
perfectly clear when you start out, before you hit the sea buoy, you're in the
middle of a horrendous storm.
"Hopefully, this was a once-in-a-century incident. But who knows? Not long ago I
was taking a refrigerated cargo ship into port Manatee. I was above the bridge
when I got hit with a huge squall. I lost control of the ship. I could not steer
her. I could not change her heading. All I could do was order full astern and
anchor until it cleared.
"If I hadn't been above the bridge, who knows what might have happened?"
The survivors and families of the skyway disaster lived with their experience in
different ways. Anthony Gattus lives in the same house in Clearwater he lived in
then, and said he rarely gives the old bridge a thought.
"I value having my family and my health, but I valued those things back then,"
Gattus said. "I value life, but I valued life before. It doesn't bother me."
There is never a good time to die, but for 92 year old Gerta Hedquist, the
future held only pain and disappointment.
"For my mother, it might have been a godsend," said Gilbert Hedquist, Gerta's
son. "I saw her a few weeks before she got on that bus. She said had been to the
doctor to see if she was okay for the trip to Europe. He said she could go, but
it probably would be the last time because of the arthritis.
"I hated the thought of seeing her bedridden. She led such an active life. It
would have killed her."
For Grace Callaway though, it couldn't have been worse. Her son, John H.
Callaway Jr., the boy they called Chip, the youngest of five children, would
have been a junior in engineering at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. He was
on his college tennis team. And he should not have been on the bus that day.
"Ordinarily, he would have taken a bus down the east coast of Florida (to his
home in Miami), but he couldn't get a ticket because of the time of the year,"
Callaway said. After Chip's death, the Tuskegee Institute named a tennis
tournament for him.
"We went for years," his mother said. "We haven't gone the last four or five
years, though, because it is hard for my husband to drive. We both have health
problems. I'm convinced Chip's death is a contributing factor."
As Callaway talks about her son, it is over cast and stormy outside her Apopka
home.
"It's just changed our lives," she said. "On a day like today, when its rainy
and dreary like it was the day the bus went off the bridge, it all comes back.
Every time I hear of a Columbine or a parent losing a child, it plays all over
again."
"It never goes away."
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