What a shame.

   / What a shame. #1  

Duffster

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This wasn't far from me.

Parade.jpg

BELLEVUE, Iowa (AP) Sandie Crilly was helping her 8-year-old son, 12-year-old niece and 2-year-old granddaughter pick up Tootsie Rolls from the ground during Bellevue's annual Fourth of July parade when someone yelled to get out of the way.

Looking up, she saw two panicked horses dragging a carriage charging toward them.

"I could see it was two horses," said Crilly, 46, of Willow Springs, Ill., who was visiting her parents in Bellevue. "I could see they were running at full speed and they were harnessed together and I knew we were going to most certainly get hit, and as soon as it happened, everybody was crying and screaming."

Someone pulled her granddaughter to safety, but Crilly said her niece broke her wrist and lost her two front teeth. At least 22 other people were injured, some critically, and one woman was killed, police and hospital officials said.

Janet Steines of Spragueville, whose husband was driving the carriage, died Sunday evening at the University of Iowa Hospital in Iowa City, according to the Hachmann Funeral Home in Bellevue.

The horses got spooked after they rubbed heads and one's bridle fell off, police said. They galloped for several blocks through downtown Bellevue, a town of about 2,300 residents along the Iowa-Illinois border. The wagon overturned at some point, dumping its four passengers.

Many of the injured were children like Crilly's niece who were picking up candy from the street that had been tossed to them.

Most of the injured were treated at hospitals and released, but at least four people remained in critical condition late Sunday and several others were seriously hurt, according to police and hospital officials.

Paramedics treated victims at an art gallery in town and a triage area was set up near the Mississippi River, where volunteers held up tarps to shield the injured and paramedics from the sun and heat, Crilly said. Others brought the injured ice and water, she said.

"It was madness," Crilly said. "I mean we were in a triage. The town really came together. It was a huge community effort."

Mayor Virgil Murray said residents were shocked, and they've never had problems with having horses in the parade before.

"We've never really had any tragedy," the mayor said. "Usually our biggest nemesis is if it rains. That's what we're always worried about."

Between 3,000 and 4,000 people attend the parade, many people coming in from rural areas and nearby towns, he said.

The injured were sent by ambulance and medical helicopter to hospitals in Dubuque, Maquoketa and Iowa City. Ten patients were taken to Mercy Medical Center-Dubuque, nine of them children, house supervisor Carol Dietzel said.

Two children in critical condition was flown to University of Iowa Hospital, and one was in fair condition at Mercy Medical, a hospital official said. Seven children were treated and released.

Iowa Gov. Chet Culver released a statement saying the victims were in his thoughts and prayers.

"I am especially saddened because the accident occurred during the events celebrating Independence Day, which is a day that should be filled with pride and joy for all Iowans and Americans," Culver said.
 
   / What a shame. #2  
saw that on the news this morning very sad.
 
   / What a shame. #4  
Runaways are not all that uncommon with horses. The darndest things will spook them.:(
 
   / What a shame.
  • Thread Starter
#5  
Runaways are not all that uncommon with horses. The darndest things will spook them.:(

Which makes one wonder why they are even allowed in a parade type setting.
 
   / What a shame. #7  
Runaways are not all that uncommon with horses.

When typing I was actually thinking of an time 60 years ago when the Horse was used as a daily work animal. One of my uncles was badly hurt when a team ran away. A neighbour was also hurt when the 4 horse team pulling a binder bolted. :(

Today it's a different world.:D
 
   / What a shame.
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Tradition. Which isn't a bad thing but nowadays it seems to be getting a bad rap. How many times has anyone seen this in their lifetime? Runaways in parades I mean?

I am all for tradition. It used to be tradition to throw candy but that isn't allowed anymore either.

I haven't seen of this before but have seen enough horses acting up to know this, or something similar, was only a matter of time.

Frankly I find it fortunate that it wasn't an innocent bystander killed.
 
   / What a shame. #9  
Sounds to me like one of the bridles wasn't secure (throatlatch or other buckle or just broke) who knows? You get one of them spooked and going nuts and it's a chain reaction of events. I still like seeing the horses in parades just not the knotheads that shouldn't have been brought in the first place! I've always said that a horse is an accident waiting to happen but I still mess with them. I also know some owners need their head examined as well. I guess most events have their risk. Air shows have crashing planes and drag races have their "runaway" cars, etc... I'm sure if I looked hard enough I'd find a runaway tractor at a tractor show.:mad:
 
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