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World's first road death
The victim
- On August 17, 1896, Bridget Driscoll, became the first road
fatality in the world.
- She was a 44year old mother with two children who had come to
London with her teenage daughter and a friend to watch a dancing
display.
The crash
- While the driver was reported to be doing 4 mph, witnesses
described her at being hit by a car travelling at "tremendous
speed".
- The crash occurred on a terrace in the grounds of Crystal
Palace in London
The vehicle
The car was owned by the Anglo-French Motor Car
Company who were offering demonstration rides to the public.
The driver
- At the time of the crash, the car was being driven by Arthur
Edsell, an employee of the company,
- He had had been driving for only 3 weeks (no driving tests or
licenses existed at that time).
- He had apparently tampered with the belt, causing the car to go
at twice the intended speed
- He was also said to have been talking to the young lady
passenger beside him
The inquest
- After a six-hour inquest, the jury returned a verdict of
"Accidental Death".
- At the inquest, the Coroner said "This must never happen
again"
- No prosecution was proposed or brought against the driver or
the company
The aftermath
- It has happened again and again-worldwide, over 1 million
people are killed each year in road crashes and countless millions
are injured.
- Five times as many people are killed on the roads than are
murdered in the UK (yet traffic safety is not a core function of
the police)
- More people died in the UK on the roads during the blackouts
than in combat
- While there has been a substantial reduction in those reported
killed and seriously injured on the road in the UK, road crashes
are still the leading cause of death and acquired disability in the
UK for those between 5 and 40 years old
- Over half of all road deaths in London are pedestrians.
- One in 80 EU residents are expected to die 40 years prematurely
due to a road crash.
- Official casualty statistics underestimate the human casualty
toll by referring to police rather than hospital statistics. Road
casualties and crashes are not required to be reported to the
police (See RoadPeace Briefing Sheet on Under-Reporting)
Ian Roberts, Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health, said
about the epidemic of road death and injury: "…it is unusual
to encounter a serious analysis of road danger in national news
media. By 2020, road crashes will have moved from ninth to third
place in the world disease ranking..if we overlook this carnage, it
will be the propaganda coup of the new millenium".
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