Terrible accident

Annie68

DIS Veteran
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Apr 17, 2003
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A fellow Firefighter lost his life this weekend, along with his wife & son :sad1: . His 2 daughters survived the crash....please keep them in your thoughts & prayers.

3 lives lost in crash, but many left hurting
BY AMBER HUNT MARTIN and STAN DONALDSON
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERS

August 1, 2005


He spent three years helping to painstakingly restore the sleek and slender car to showroom shape.


He helped his father tear the convertible down to its frame. Then, on nights and weekends, they slowly returned it, piece by piece, to its original glory.


Once the project was finished -- when Bradley Patton would finally have to return the green-and-black 1929 Duesenberg with the tan soft top to its owner -- he decided to take it for one final spin with his wife, Kristin, and their three children in Superior Township.


But about 10 minutes from home, the ride turned deadly.


Bradley and Kristin Patton, both 35, were instantly killed, as was their 8-year-old son Nathan, when police say a Volvo ran a stop sign and slammed into the classic car at 8:10 p.m. Saturday.


The Pattons' two daughters -- Emily, 7, and Taylor, 10 -- were transported to University of Michigan Hospitals in serious condition.


Hospital spokeswoman Andi McDonnell said Sunday that Emily was upgraded to fair condition and Taylor to good condition.


The Duesenberg, built long before seat belts were mandatory in cars, had no restraints. The convertible top was down, authorities said.


The car rolled several times when hit at the intersection of Ford Road and Old Ford Road, ejecting the whole family.


The unidentified 25-year-old driver of the 2001 Volvo was not harmed.


He was arrested and transported to the Washtenaw County Jail, then released until the county Prosecutor's Office decides this week whether to charge him with negligent homicide.


The scene was especially heartbreaking once Superior Township firefighters arrived. Some had worked with Bradley Patton, a fellow firefighter in Ypsilanti, when he volunteered for their department.


"They're hurting as much as we are right now," Ypsilanti Fire Capt. William Wagner said, of the township firefighters.


Wagner described Patton as a devoted husband and father who loved restoring cars on the side with his father.


He and his dad planned to return the Duesenberg to its owner, a friend in Bloomfield Hills, Sunday so that it could be shipped to California for an auto show today.


"They had finished preparing the car, and he was proud of it and wanted to take the family for a ride before they sent it off," Wagner said Sunday.


The Duesenberg is the "ultimate collectible car," said Don Sommer, chairman of the annual Meadow Brook Concours d'Elegance. About 200 remain of the original 450, mostly made between 1929 and 1936.


The cars can net $1 million at auction.


Adding seat belts would have destroyed its value, Sommer said, and might not have saved the Pattons.


"For a car that heavy to get hit and roll; that was a hard hit," he said. "In something like that, there's not any safety thing you can do."


Lt. Max Anthouard of the Ypsilanti Fire Department said Bradley Patton and his father, Terry, were proud of the work they'd done on the car.


"His father told us yesterday that the car was very rare, but not as rare as his son," Anthouard said.


Anthouard rushed to the scene of the accident after he learned Patton was among the victims.


Patton won several awards for saving lives in his 12 years of fighting fires -- six years each in Superior Township and Ypsilanti.


In 2003, he was honored for saving two unconscious girls, ages 2 and 9, from a burning building.


During the rescue, he fell down some stairs and cracked his face shield, burning his face.


Interviewed by the Ypsilanti Courier at the time, Patton shrugged off the "hero" label.


"I was doing what I was paid to do," he told the newspaper.


Anthouard said Patton was an excellent firefighter with a great reputation.


"He was a good all-around guy," he said. "We're sure going to miss him a lot."


The Pattons lived in a quaint ranch-style home, white with burgundy shutters, at the border of Ann Arbor and Superior Township. A trampoline in the backyard could be spied from the street.


Neighbor Priscilla Johnson, 40, said Kristin Patton was nearly finished with a degree in nursing from Eastern Michigan University. The two often chatted at their kids' bus stop as they sent them off to school.


Nathan was best friends with Johnson's 8-year-old daughter, Emily. The two often ate dinner at each other's houses, she said.


"Whenever he came over, we had to buy a big gallon of milk because he would drink it all," Johnson said. "He was a wonderful addition to our family."


Two memorial funds have been created for the Patton family. The International Association of Firefighters, Local 401, is accepting donations at 525 W. Michigan Ave., Ypsilanti 48197.


Donations also can be mailed to the Ypsilanti Area Federal Credit Union, 424 S. Mansfield St., Ypsilanti 48197.


Contact AMBER HUNT MARTIN at 313-222-2708 or hunt@freepress.com. Contact STAN DONALDSON at 586-469-4682 or donaldson@freepress.com.

Copyright © 2005 Detroit Free Press Inc.
 
That's so sad! :sad:

Of all the bad driving I see, it's people who run stop signs/red lights that tick me off the most. And this is why! :mad:
 

Oh my goodness, how sad. I will keep them in my prayers. That just breaks my heart.
:(
 
I agree with you 100%. It amazes me the amount of red light runners I encounter driving to and from work everyday.

Chicago526 said:
That's so sad! :sad:

Of all the bad driving I see, it's people who run stop signs/red lights that tick me off the most. And this is why! :mad:
 
I seen it on the news last night. The car looked pretty bad. My prayers go out to the family especially the two girls!!!
 
I have noticed that many people around here are speeding up, instead of slowing down, when they see a yellow light. Are they really in that much of a hurry that stopping for a light is going to make a difference?

I can't help but wonder too about the 25 year old man in the other car, what actually happened to cause him to run that light. The article didn't indicate alcohol or drugs being involved, was he just being reckless and/or not paying attention? He will have to live with this for the rest of his life :guilty: . My heart goes out to both families involved.
 
Just correcting one point: the other driver ran a stop sign, not a red light, not that it's any better. :guilty:
 
That's an extremely sad story, but one that could have been avoided. We went out with my husband's cousins for dinner. They had just bought a classic Cadillac and said my son could ride in it with them on the way back to their house. I refused however, because there were no seatbelts in the car and I would not let my son get in the backseat of a classic convertible without a seatbelt. I feel the father, as good a father as he was, was very negligent in taking the kids without seatbelts.
 
I saw that on the news last night and have been thinking about that poor family (especially those little girls) all day. How very sad. :sad1:
 
Annie68 said:
Adding seat belts would have destroyed its value, Sommer said, and might not have saved the Pattons.


"For a car that heavy to get hit and roll; that was a hard hit," he said. "In something like that, there's not any safety thing you can do."

I HATE when people say that a seatbelt "wouldn't have helped". How do they know? Maybe the family wouldn't have been ejected. My dad is one of those "Ah--A seatbelt won't make a difference in a bad crash" people. Makes me nuts!

So, so sad. Those two surviving girls will have a long road ahead of them. They lost their family. How very tragic. :sad2:
 
Our thoughts and prayers are with the girls and the rest of the family at this terrible time. :grouphug:
 
hentob said:
I HATE when people say that a seatbelt "wouldn't have helped". How do they know? Maybe the family wouldn't have been ejected. My dad is one of those "Ah--A seatbelt won't make a difference in a bad crash" people. Makes me nuts!

So, so sad. Those two surviving girls will have a long road ahead of them. They lost their family. How very tragic. :sad2:


Accidents do happen where the safety equipment wouldn't help anyway.

I remember a Trauma: Life in the ER show with an accident victim and her baby girl (14-18 months old). The car rolled over sooo many times. The girl was secure in her car seat. She died anyway. The equipment failed b/c it wasn't meant to survive a crushing multiple roll-over (like 7 or 8 times). It was very sad.

Sometimes they just see enough damage that they just know.

A t-boned rolled over convertible with a family of 5 in it. Even with seatbelts, I can still picture how a fatality would still have occurred.

Out of respect for the family--I'll spare the details.
 
Martha,
I must have been thinking red light when I read stop sign, thank you for letting me know.

Here's an article from today's paper:

Funeral on hold 'til kids are OK
BY STAN DONALDSON
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

August 3, 2005


A funeral service for three family members killed in a car accident in Superior Township on Saturday will be on hold until the two survivors are released from the hospital.


Krista Hopson, spokeswoman of the University of Michigan Hospitals in Ann Arbor, said Tuesday that 10-year-old Taylor Patton and her 7-year-old sister, Emily, are in good condition.


The sisters were injured in the crash that killed their parents, Bradley and Kristin Patton, both 35, and their brother Nathan, 8, at the intersection of Old Ford and Ford roads. The family was riding in a recently restored 1929 Duesenberg.


Hopson said the family was determining who would be its spokesperson and said relatives were at the hospital with the girls. They did not return calls to the Free Press on Tuesday.


"This is a really tough time for the family," she said.


Authorities say the three family members died when a 25-year-old Ann Arbor man ran a stop sign around 8:10 p.m. and crashed his 2001 Volvo into the vintage car.


Washtenaw County Sheriff Commander David Egeler said the office's traffic crash team is investigating. He said the office wouldn't know until next week whether to ask the county prosecutor to file negligent homicide charges against the unidentified driver.


The funeral will be at Zion Lutheran Church in Ann Arbor and the three family members will be buried at Dixboro Cemetery, located a few minutes from the family's home, said Jim Roberts, chief of the Ypsilanti City Fire Department. Bradley Patton worked at the fire department for six years.


Barry Ludwig, a pastor at the church, said Bradley and Kristin Patton were married at the church and their children were baptized there.


Roberts said the time and date of the funeral would be arranged once the family knew when the two daughters could attend.


Restoring cars was Bradley Patton's hobby.


He and his father, Terry, worked for a year and a half to restore the rare Duesenberg for a Bloomfield Hills resident. The car did not include seat belts.


A woman who identified herself as the wife of car owner Charles Letts said the family was "managing as best as they could under the circumstances." She declined further comment.


Seat belts were introduced on cars in the early 1960s and became mandatory in 1968. But cars made before then are not required to add seat belts..


Jon Bill, an archivist at the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Museum in Auburn, Ind., said restorers are very strict about rebuilding a vintage model.


"Most people who restore cars do them faithfully as to when the car was built new," Bill said.


Contact STAN DONALDSON at 586-469-4682 or donaldson@freepress.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
 
so sad!another brother gone.i will post this in the fire house today so my guys can make donations to the family.
 


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