Last survivor of 1958 disaster won’t let COVID-19 stop him from honouring dead
VANCOUVER — A sunny afternoon instantly turned dark for Lucien Lessard on June 17, 1958, as he plunged into the ocean when a support collapsed on a bridge being constructed between Vancouver and North Vancouver.
Lessard, now 91, was among 79 workers who fell from the Second Narrows Bridge in what remains one of British Columbia’s worst industrial accidents.
He is the last survivor of the disaster that killed 23 people, mostly iron workers, two engineers and a crane operator. A diver who searched for bodies in Burrard Inlet drowned.
On Wednesday, Lessard planned to be at the site as part of an annual ceremony commemorating those who worked on the span, which was renamed the Iron Workers Memorial Second Narrows Bridge in 1994.