Edward Goble Popular Books

Edward Goble Biography & Facts

The collision and plunge into Big Sandy River involving a school bus near Prestonsburg, Kentucky, on February 28, 1958, resulted in the deaths of 26 students and the bus's driver. It was the third-deadliest bus crash in United States history, tied for fatalities with the Carrollton, Kentucky bus collision in 1988. The only deadlier crashes were a 1963 bus-train crash in Chualar, California and the 1976 Yuba City bus disaster, which claimed the lives of 29 people. Crash On a cold and cloudy morning, after a period of heavy rains and thaw, a Floyd County school bus loaded with 48 elementary and high school students bound for school in Prestonsburg, Kentucky struck the rear of a wrecker truck on U.S. Route 23 and fell down an embankment into the swollen waters of the Levisa Fork of the Big Sandy River, where it was swept downstream and submerged. Response National Guard and other authorities and agencies responded to the disaster. On March 5, 1958, governor Happy Chandler ordered 500 national guardsmen from 9 different cities to join the effort to find those still missing. The bus was finally located by Navy divers, and removed from the river 53 hours later. Victims Twenty-two children escaped the bus in the first few minutes as it became fully submerged in the raging flood stage waters and made it safely out of the river. However, 26 other children and the bus driver drowned. Rita Cheryl Matney, 7, of Prestonsburg, Kentucky. Sandra Faye Cline, 8, of Lancer, Kentucky. Anna Laura Goble, 9, of Emma, Kentucky. James Edison Carey, 9, of Emma, Kentucky. Paulette Cline, 9, of Lancer, Kentucky. James L. Meade Jr., 9, of Lancer, Kentucky John Spencer Goble, 11, of Emma, Kentucky. James Edward Goble, 12, of Emma, Kentucky. John Harlan Hughes Jr., 13, of Lancer, Kentucky. Katie Carol Jarrell, 13, of Sugar Loaf, Kentucky. Jane Carrol Harris, 14, of Emma, Kentucky. Emma Joyce Ann Matney, 14, of Emma, Kentucky. Kenneth Forrest Cisco, 14, of Sugar Loaf, Kentucky. Marcella Jervis, 14, of Emma, Kentucky. Montaine Jervis, 14, of Endicott, Kentucky. Linda Darby, 14, of Cow Creek, Kentucky. Nannie Joyce McPeek, 13, of Lancer, Kentucky. She was predeceased by her parents, Allen Roby McPeek and Roma McPeek. At the time of her death, she was living with the Cline family. Bucky Ray Jarrell, 15, of Sugar Loaf, Kentucky. Doris Faye Burchett, 15, of Emma, Kentucky. Her body was found on April 16, 1958. Her uncle, Graham Burchett, headed volunteer search efforts to help recover bodies from the crash site for months after the crash. James Thomas Ousley, 15, of Lancer, Kentucky. Margaret Louise Hunt, 15, of Cow Creek, Kentucky. Thomas Roosevelt Jarvis, 15, of Buffalo Creek, Kentucky. Glenda May Cisco, 16, of Sugar Loaf, Kentucky. Katherine Justice, 17, of Endicott, Kentucky. Emogene Darby, 17, of Cow Creek, Kentucky. Randy Scott Wallen, 17, of Lancer, Kentucky. John Alex DeRossett, 27, of Prestonsburg, Kentucky. He was the driver of the bus. Aftermath The crash would become the impetus behind the formation of the Floyd County Emergency & Rescue Squad, founded by volunteers on April 27, 1958. To this day, the FCERS remains a 100% volunteer agency, and assists local police departments, volunteer fire departments, and EMS with auto extrication, search and rescue, fireground support, and EMS first response in addition to its original role as the primary water rescue agency for the area. The 27-person death toll is tied with the Carrollton bus disaster in 1988 for the third highest number of fatalities resulting from a bus crash. Both happened in Kentucky and in each, the victims were all thought to have survived the initial collisions, but were unable to safely evacuate the school-type buses afterwards. After the 1988 crash, Kentucky changed its public school bus equipment requirements and requires a higher number of emergency exits than any other state or Canadian province. Depiction in media Several months later, two American recording artists released songs about the crash: The Stanley Brothers, with "No School Bus in Heaven," and Ralph Bowman, with "The Tragedy of Bus 27." Neither made the national Billboard Hot 100 charts, but they did receive regional airplay in some parts of the country. In recent years the accident has been the subject of two documentary films, The Very Worst Thing and A Life of Its Own, and the site of the bus accident has been marked by a sign bearing a dark image of a school bus superimposed with the names of the children and driver that died. There is usually a wreath of plastic flowers on the guardrail in front of the sign, which is located on Route 1428 (old US 23) 0.6 miles (0.97 km) east of the intersection of Route 302. See also Wayne Corporation – History of a different school bus manufacturer with information about bus safety engineering References Prestonsburg School Bus Crash Big Sandy Bus Accident 1958 Copley, Rich (February 21, 2010). "Film depicts an Appalachian tragedy; Documentary recalls 1958 school bus crash that killed 26 children in Floyd County". kentucky.com. Lexington Herald-Leader. Retrieved January 22, 2015. (Archive.is link) Floyd County Emergency & Rescue Squad History . Discover the Edward Goble popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Edward Goble books.

Best Seller Edward Goble Books of 2024

  • I Believe, Understanding the Nicene Creed synopsis, comments

    I Believe, Understanding the Nicene Creed

    Edward Goble

    A Creed is a “system, doctrine, or formula of religious belief.” Since ours was not a churchgoing family in the early years, Jesus Loves Me, was the closest thing I had to an autho...

  • Both Ways synopsis, comments

    Both Ways

    Edward Goble

    Almond Grove, California is home to the growing Community Chapel Church and their charismatic young pastor, Madison Enright. Madison and his newlywed bride, Jill, moved to the stru...

  • And No Religion Too synopsis, comments

    And No Religion Too

    Edward Goble

    And No Religion, Too is a group of essays about life in the Kingdom of God. Some of the stories are about faith and simplicity, about the sacramental experience with the risen Chri...

  • The Little Book of Virtues synopsis, comments

    The Little Book of Virtues

    Edward Goble

    The Little Book of Virtues is like a walk through a garden of flowers. Somehow each blossom is the most beautiful, the most fragrant, and the most desirable. In each flower you see...

  • Sincerely, Jesus synopsis, comments

    Sincerely, Jesus

    Edward Goble

    Can you imagine thumbing through your daily mail and finding a letter from Jesus Christ? Not a prank, not a hoax, but the genuine article a letter from heaven, from the risen Lord...

  • Less Of Me synopsis, comments

    Less Of Me

    Edward Goble

    In Less of Me, we meet Andrew Boyd, a Bay Area author riding a string of best selling spy novels featuring a retired Senior Intelligence Officer, Rance Broadback, who now serves th...