Ogden, Utah, 1937
STUNTER FLIPS AUTO ON BACK
'Crash Of Death' Performed Before Small Crowd At Stadium
Before a small and shivering crowd of spectators, Jerry Edwards, 32-year-old Detroit stunt driver, presented his hair-raising "crash of death" performance Saturday night in the Ogden stadium.
"This is one of the smallest crowds I've ever showed before," Edwards told the onlookers through a loud-speaking system. "But I have to work just as hard for you as I do when I perform before 20,000 people, as I have often done."
PRECEDES CAMPAIGN
Edwards was brought here under the auspices of the junior chamber of commerce as the forerunner of a county-wide safety week campaign sponsored by a citizens' safety council, comprising Ogden service clubs.
The climax to the show, in which Edwards used two stock light sedans, came when the dare-devil sped his crimson machine up a wooden platform, crashing full somersault and bottoms-up again on the sodded field.
NO SERIOUS HURTS
During the four years Edwards has been presenting his death-defying stunts, he has never suffered serious injury, although he has been put out of "commission" temporarily and unable to finish his show.
"The best thing to do when you have a flat tire is to step on the gas — not the brakes," Edwards told the crowd.
He said one of the best precautions against accidents is to keep both hands firmly on the steering wheel.
—The Ogden Standard-Examiner, Ogden City, Utah, May 9, 1937, page 10A.
Thursday, April 26, 2007
'Crash Of Death' Stunt Driver In Hair-Raising Performance
Labels:
1937,
automobiles,
daredevil,
performers,
safety,
stunt-driver,
Utah
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