'Never be forgotten': Heron Road Bridge renamed 50 years after deadly collapse - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:47 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

'Never be forgotten': Heron Road Bridge renamed 50 years after deadly collapse

Mike Lecuyer was 18 and on his second day of work when the Heron Road Bridge collapsed on Aug. 10, 1966, killing nine people. 50 years after the disaster, he says renaming the Ottawa bridge is part of honouring those lost lives.

Renaming of Ottawa bridge will 'remind the up-and-coming generation that this was a helluva tragedy'

ARCHIVES | 50 years since fatal Heron Road Bridge collapse

8 years ago
Duration 1:08
On Aug. 10, 1966, the under-construction bridge on Heron Road collapsed, killing nine people. On the 50th anniversary of the disaster, the now-complete bridge is being renamed being renamed the "Heron Road Workers Memorial Bridge."

MikeLecuyerhad just finishedshovelling a load ofcementon his second day of work on the Heron Road Bridge on Aug. 10, 1966 when he noticed a curious sight:four-by-fours toppling at the other end of the structure.

In "the roar of everything,"the 18-year-old construction rookie didn't immediately realize that a section of the new Ottawa bridge he had been hired to helpbuild was collapsing into the RideauRiver below an infrastructure disaster that would claim nine lives and injure dozens more.

"We heard all the screams and the yells,"he recalled 50 years later.

Then, suddenly, hewas being "buried alive" by cement.

"It just happened so fast, but when I realized that I was still alive, that's when it kicked in, 'Oh, my. This is not good. I'm going to die now,'" he said. "And, of course, no one could help you at the time with all the wet cement and the rubble and the reinforcing rods whipping around and that's where a lot of guys got impaled by the rods."

Workers pick up the pieces after the Heron Road Bridge collapsed in August 1966. (CBC Archives)

'Let the bridge do the talking'

Lecuyer has lived with the horror of that day for 50 years and shares his story to make sure it's not a forgotten part of Ottawa's history.

Now on the anniversary of that awful day, he said it's appropriate the bridge completed after the collapse is being renamed the Heron Road Workers' Memorial Bridge.

"I won't be around forever, so let the bridge do the talking ... to remind the up-and-coming generation that this was a helluva tragedy, and let's not ever have it happen again," he said.

"It would be fitting for the families to know their lost ones will never be forgotten."

A brief ceremony will be held at 12:15 p.m. Wednesday at the bridge.

Escaping the wreckage

Lecuyer said he was lucky to be conscious after surviving a fall during thecollapse of the bridge but he remembers struggling to breathe.

"I realized, 'Woah, woah, wow, I'm still alive.' But every time I tried to take a breath, the cement would sort of come down off the pillar and push me into all the rubble and sort of bury me. I'd get my head up and try to clear myself out and another big blob would come down," he said.

"By the time I realized what was happening I was up to my chest in wet cement."

The saving grace, he said, was that his leg was caught on a rod "way over his head," allowing him to reach up and grab his foot to pull himself up.

"That's the only thing, basically that saved me. And not being knocked out. Had I been knocked I would have been dead," he said.

A pillar is hoisted up during the bridge collapse clean-up. (CBC Archives)

'Different outlook on life'

Once Lecuyerfinallyescapedthe cement, he faced what he thought was another deadly obstacle a crane.

Mike Lecuyer, now 68, says he has a "different outlook on life" after surviving the fatal Heron Road Bridge collapse. (courtesy of Mike Lecuyer)
"I thought it was wavering but it wasn't. It was me because I'd been hit a couple of times in the head," he said.

Lecuyer took off running or so he thought.

"I thought I was running but I wasn't. My arms were moving but, unfortunately, my legs weren't," he said.

He said a friend grabbed him, and the pair went off to search for others who had been buried on the other side of the bridge. They eventually made it to the hospital.

"It could have just ended right there. Life, in general, there are good times, bad times but it doesn't matter: you're alive," he said. "You just have a different outlook on life. A different appreciation."

9 killed in collapse

Nine workers were killed in the collapse:

  • Leonard T. Baird
  • Clarence Beattie
  • Jean-Paul Guerin
  • Omer Lamadeleine
  • Edmund Newton
  • Lucien Regimbald
  • Domenico Romano
  • Raymond Tremblay
  • Joas Viegas

An inquiry into the collapse that heard from more than 70 witnesses found there was a lack of bracing of bridge supports as concrete was being poured.

A memorial plaque near the bridge honours the nine workers who died. (Sandra Abma/CBC)
There were "significant changes" to rules and regulations surrounding workplace safety after the disaster, said Sean McKenny, the head of the Ottawa and District Labour Council.

"It was just sort of a snowball effect. A lot started to happen," he said. "More of a focus towards health and safety, and the importance from a contractor's perspective of ensuring that they're providing a [healthy and safe] workplace for all of the workers on the job."

with files from Sandra Abma and CBC Archives