Tag Archives: samuel torrance

When Things Come 360 –The First Automobile Fatality in Carleton Place– Torrance, Burgess, and Names Names

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When Things Come 360 –The First Automobile Fatality in Carleton Place– Torrance, Burgess, and Names Names

About a year ago I wrote When was the First Car Fatality in Carleton Place? 

I never thought much about it and knew that in 1906 the first car fatality in Carleton Place occurred when Samuel A. Torrance’s automobile collided with a locomotive at the railway station crossing.  One of his passengers was killed.

Then yesterday I found the article about the accident as I was looking for something else.

 

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“Mr. W Snedden whose hotel was just at the crossing” Snedden Hotel and the Grand Central Hotel in the background.

photo- Carleton Place and Beckwith Heritage Museum-Edwards store

 

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Clipped from The Ottawa Journal,  04 Sep 1906, Tue,  Page 1

 

 

Come and visit the Lanark County Genealogical Society Facebook page– what’s there? Cool old photos–and lots of things interesting to read. Also check out The Tales of Carleton Place.

Information where you can buy all Linda Seccaspina’s books-You can also read Linda in The Townships Sun andScreamin’ Mamas (USA)

 

 

relatedreading

 When was the First Car Fatality in Carleton Place?

Did You Know we Once Had a Grand Hotel? The Grand Central Hotel

Rollin’ Down the Mississippi River —- Tunes and Cars of Carleton Place 1971

Remembering the Carleton Place CPR Gardensunnamed (1)

When was the First Car Fatality in Carleton Place?

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In 1906 the first car fatality in Carleton Place occurred when Samuel A. Torrance’s automobile collided with a locomotive at the railway station crossing.  One of his passengers was killed.

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The Carleton Place car before- check after below.

Dad (Bob Aitkenhead) and Mrs. Heedon or Weedon -AITKENHEAD PHOTO COLLECTION

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The Aikenhead car after–AITKENHEAD PHOTO COLLECTION

historicalnotes

 In 1869, Irish scientist Mary Ward was riding in a steam-powered automobile built by her cousins. As they rounded a bend in the road, Ward was thrown from her seat and fell in the vehicle’s path. One of the wheels rolled over her and broke her neck, killing her instantly.

Ohio City, Ohio claims the first accident involving a gasoline-powered auto, a little closer to what most of us think of as a car today. In 1891, engineer James Lambert was driving one of his inventions, an early gasoline-powered buggy, when he ran into a little trouble. The buggy, also carrying passenger James Swoveland, hit a tree root sticking out of the ground. Lambert lost control and the vehicle swerved and crashed into a hitching post. Both men suffered minor injuries.

The first recorded pedestrian fatalities by car came a few years later. In 1896, Bridget Driscoll stepped off of a London curb and was struck and killed by a gas-powered Anglo-French model car driven by Arthur Edsall. While the car had a top speed of four miles per hour, neither Edsall nor Driscoll—who witnesses described as “bewildered” by the sight of the vehicle and frozen in place—were able to avoid the collision. Edsall was arrested, but the death was ruled an accident and he was not prosecuted. The coroner who examined Driscoll’s body is famously quoted as saying that he hoped “such a thing would never happen again.” (That same year, a bicyclist was killed by an automobile in New York City.)

The first pedestrian death in the U.S. occurred on September 13, 1899 (not a Friday). Henry Bliss, according to contemporary accounts, was either disembarking from a New York City streetcar or helping a woman step out when he was struck by an electrically-powered taxi cab. He died from injuries to his head and chest the next morning.

The first driver fatality from a collision (not counting Ward’s unfortunate ejection) happened in 1898, when Englishman Henry Lindfield and his son were driving from Brighton to London. Near the end of their trip, Lindfield lost control of the car while going down a hill. They crashed through a fence and Lindfield was thrown from the driver’s seat before the car ran into a tree and caught his leg between them. His son was not hurt and ran for help. At the hospital, surgeons found the leg was crushed below the knee and decided to amputate it. After the operation, Lindfield remained unconscious and died the following day.–Matt Soniak

 

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In 1914 there were 25 automobiles registered in the town of Carleton Place. For a town of 3,700 that’s quite a few – considering a Ford was selling for about $600. This is David Findlay and family in their car in front of their family home on Moffatt Street.-

 

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Bennett’s Chevrolet in the old Leland Hotel – Photo- Carleton Place Canadian Files from the Carleton Place and Beckwith Heritage Museum

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historicalnotes

 - of friends In Lanark county. Mr. D, J. Morrow...

Clipped from

  1. The Ottawa Journal,
  2. 18 Jun 1906, Mon,
  3. Page 8

 

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Samuel Torrance lived a great many years after that and is buried in the St. James Cemetery in Carleton Place.