Beaver Dam Bridge Explained

Beaver Dam Bridge
Crosses:York River, Quebec
Collapsed:May 22, 1963
Material:Concrete
Lanes:2
Locale:Gaspe Peninsula
Native Name:Pont Beaver Dam
Native Name Lang:fr

The Beaver Dam Bridge (French: Pont Beaver Dam) was a bridge along the York River in Quebec, Canada. The bridge was situated on Quebec Route 198 and connected the Quebecois municipalities of Murdochville and Gaspé. The bridge collapsed on May 22, 1963, due to flood damage and killed 6 people, all mine workers heading toward Murdochville.[1] [2]

Tragedy

On May 22, 1963, a pillar of the Beaver Dam Bridge was knocked down and swept away by flood waters early in the morning. Six cars who weren't aware of the pillar collapse plunged into the York River, banging hard on the bridge's concrete in the process, which killed the occupants. A car containing four people that plunged into the river floated 800 meters down the York River before the people in the car were able to escape and warn incoming traffic of the bridge's collapse, preventing further deaths.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: CBC.ca - Quebec AM. www.cbc.ca.
  2. Web site: Tragédie du pont Beaver Dam: un monument à la mémoire des victimes. www.journaldemontreal.com. 21 May 2013 . french.