Stevenson community in shock following Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse
As a young girl growing up in Baltimore City, Yolanda Peace remembers Sundays when she climbed into the backseat of her family car for a trip over the Francis Scott Key Bridge.
I remember always on Sundays, my father would have to take my mother to work, and we would be in the car as kids just in awe looking at all the water, said Peace, who works in food services at Stevenson. We had never seen it. I was a city girl, born and raised. It was just exciting for us on Sunday to go across that bridge.
Her mother, aunts, and uncles worked at Bethlehem Steel in Sparrows Point in Baltimore. It closed in 2012, replaced by Under Armours international headquarters and other warehouse distribution centers.
On Tuesday morning around 1:30 a.m., the Key Bridge collapsed into the Patapsco River after a support was struck by a large container shipping vessel. Peace had to tell her mother about the tragedy that has taken the lives at least two of eight construction workers who were filling potholes on the bridge at the time of the collapse.
Full story at The Stevenson Villager, Stevenson University's student news site.