Tuesday, July 24, 2018

On 30th December 1952, an incident described as ‘1 in 150,000’ by the Daily Mail occurred when Tower Bridge began to open with a no.78 double decker bus on it. (thanks Tony)




Albert Gunter, the driver had been operating the bus at about 12mph when suddenly the northern arm of the bridge began to lift. Gunter realised that he had no option but to speed up otherwise the vehicle would have fallen into the River Thames. Luckily the south side was slower to lift which meant that the bus dropped the much more preferable several feet and miraculously remained upright.

Of the 20 passengers, 4 were treated for minor injuries on the bridge, 10 were taken to Guy’s Hospital including the driver and the conductor, and 11 year old Peter Dunn of Bermondsey suffered a fractured collarbone.

The aftermath of the Tower Bridge incident saw Albert Gunter becoming something of a minor celebrity. His buddies nicknamed him "parachute", and the West London Observer reports that Gunter was chosen to judge a driving competition, but the best is that after 7 months of being afraid of travelling on public transport due to the incident, Miss May Walshaw finally conquered her fears by taking the same route with Gunter across the same bridge.

Two weeks later she was married with Albert Gunter as her best man!


https://lookup.london/the-bus-that-jumped-tower-bridge/
https://funlondontours.com/double-decker-bus-jumps-tower-bridge/
http://carolineld.blogspot.com/2008/07/drama-on-tower-bridge.html

11 comments:

  1. I'm sure it's a legit story but that black and white photo looks pretty hokey. It looks like the newspaper "literally" cut and pasted the photo.

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    1. Exactly what was done... it's a true story, but no photos were taken by accident at that exact moment... no one walked around with cameras back then. Of the 3 sources I linked to, one of them made the image, and they are clear about that, to just illustrate the action, and what is meant by "jumping the gap" between ramps

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    2. I believe the Tower Bridge Exhibition has a photo of the bus after the landing but I couldn't find anything on the net.
      Tony

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    3. thanks for looking!

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    4. Yep its true story.. he was my 3rd grt uncle.

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    5. Wow! Very cool!

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  2. It's a true story. I was in school with Peter Dunn, the head Mr Murphy paraded him around school with his arm in a sling, to give a first hand account of the adventure. I recall there was a picture on the front page of the Evening News. the school was Alma Alexis st.

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    1. A heartfelt thank you for your note! Thank you very much, it's a remarkable story, but it's even more remarkable to hear from you about your 1st hand experience that shows the aftermath of the event, in such a relatable way!
      How did you find my post about this? I'm shocked!

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  3. Can anyone tell me where he is burried?
    I'd like to visit his grave. What he did was brave & he saved lives, from a 22 second video I've seen of him he came across as a nice person.

    Thanks
    d.harrison981@btinternet.com

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  4. Hi I can 100% confirm this is true, as Albert Gunter was my Grandad, my Grandad cremated and he has a plaque at Islington cemetery in Finchley by the church

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