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6 workers presumed dead; Baltimore’s Key Bridge collapses after container ship hits support column

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Editor’s note:This story was last updated in the early morning of March 27. See our coverage updates.

A massive container ship adrift at 9 mph issued a “mayday” early Tuesday as it headed toward the iconic Francis Scott Key Bridge, losing power before colliding with one of the vital support columns. As the 984-foot vessel struck the bridge in the middle of an otherwise calm night, it caused a din that woke people ashore and immediately toppled an essential mid-Atlantic thoroughfare into the frigid waters.

The effects were immediate and catastrophic: Authorities began searching for six construction workers who had been repairing potholes on the Interstate 695 bridge at the time of the collapse. By Tuesday evening, their employer said they were presumed dead, and the Coast Guard said it was ending rescue efforts.

Citizens and officials mourned — Mt. Olive Baptist Church of Turner Station in Dundalk hosted an interfaith prayer vigil Tuesday evening — while working to pick up the pieces from a catastrophe that reverberated up and down the East Coast, as well as around the U.S. and the world. One of three paths across Baltimore’s harbor had been destroyed and, in the same motion, a major shipping channel was obstructed by the very steel that had safely guided thousands of commuters across it the day before.

Despite promises from President Joe Biden that the federal government will pay for a new bridge, state and federal officials couldn’t say how long that would take. But it was clear the devastation, traffic detours and impact on commerce will be long-lasting.

The ship, a Singapore-flagged vessel named Dali with thousands of containers on it, departed the Port of Baltimore around 1 a.m., then quickly ran into trouble. It’s unknown what, precisely, caused the collision at 1:27 a.m., but the ship reported losing power just before it struck the bridge. The National Transportation and Safety Board is investigating the accident — which authorities said does not appear to be intentional nor an act of terrorism — but had not boarded the vessel to collect evidence, such as recorders, as of Tuesday afternoon.

It did not want to disturb the more pressing matter: search efforts led by the U.S. Coast Guard. But Tuesday night, Rear Adm. Shannon Gilreath said the rescue efforts would be suspended.

“Based on the length of time that has gone on in the search, the extensive search efforts that we’ve put into it, the water temperature, at this point we do not believe we are going to find any of these individuals still alive,” Gilreath said.

Two people — one who was briefly hospitalized and another who declined a trip to a hospital — were rescued, authorities said.

Many more may have been spared: The Maryland Transportation Authority Police on the highway above the ship prevented many cars from driving on the bridge just before the collapse, likely saving lives.

Hours after the overnight collision, sunrise illuminated the chaos. A massive ship sat in the middle of the Patapsco River and strewn about were pieces of what used to be the 1.6-mile bridge that carried 12.4 million commercial and passenger vehicles in 2023.

Baltimore awoke to the tragedy: states of emergency declared by both the mayor and governor, ongoing prayers and rescue efforts for those missing, and a bridge that had disappeared from the skyline.

  • Gov. Wes Moore, center, and Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller answer...

    Gov. Wes Moore, center, and Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller answer questions during a press conference near the site of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge after a support column was struck by a container ship collapsed early Tuesday morning. This is their third news conference of the day. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Gov. Wes Moore, left, and Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller hold...

    Gov. Wes Moore, left, and Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller hold press conference near the site of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge after a support column was struck by a container ship collapsed early Tuesday morning. This is their third news conference of the day. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Gov. Wes Moore, center, answers questions from news media near...

    Gov. Wes Moore, center, answers questions from news media near the site of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge after a support column was struck by a container ship early Tuesday morning. This is the third news conference Moore held at the site. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a container ship, sending at least people and cars into the Patapsco River. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Baltimore County police officers on Bethlehem Boulevard look at the...

    Baltimore County police officers on Bethlehem Boulevard look at the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge after it was struck by a container ship on Tuesday.(Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • First responders and officials from Baltimore City and Baltimore County...

    First responders and officials from Baltimore City and Baltimore County attended a prayer vigil in honor of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse at Mt. Olive Baptist Church of Turner Station in Dundalk. (Cassidy Jensen/Staff)

  • Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott speaks at a prayer vigil for...

    Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott speaks at a prayer vigil for victims of the bridge collapse at Mt. Olive Baptist Church of Turner Station in Dundalk on Tuesday. (Cassidy Jensen/Staff)

  • First responders search for victims in the remains of the...

    First responders search for victims in the remains of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge. The massive container ship Dali lost power before colliding with one of the bridge’s support columns early Tuesday. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a container ship. (Teresa Parrott)

  • View of collapsed Key Bridge from Stoney Beach. In the...

    View of collapsed Key Bridge from Stoney Beach. In the foreground is a pier connected to the Brandon Shores power plant. (Amy Davis/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a container ship. (Teresa Parrott)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a container ship. (Teresa Parrott)

  • Jesus Campos, an employee of Brawner Builders, said his coworkers...

    Jesus Campos, an employee of Brawner Builders, said his coworkers and friends were on the Key Bridge when it collapsed. Campos said he recently switched shifts, but had been working on the bridge himself before the shifts rotated. (Emily Opilo/Staff)

  • Maryland Natural Resources police set up at Fort Smallwood offer...

    Maryland Natural Resources police set up at Fort Smallwood offer additional support to crews proving transport from Fort Armistead. The collapsed Key Bridge is in the distance. (Amy Davis/Staff)

  • Residents and media gather to view the collapsed Key Bridge...

    Residents and media gather to view the collapsed Key Bridge from Stoney Beach, a private community south of the Brandon Shores power plant, at left. (Amy Davis/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Dozens of reporters and television crews are on the scene...

    Dozens of reporters and television crews are on the scene at the Maryland Transportation Authority campus this morning after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key bridge. (Barbara Haddock Taylor/Staff)

  • March 26, 2024: William J. DeBagno, Special Agent in charge...

    March 26, 2024: William J. DeBagno, Special Agent in charge of the Baltimore Field Office of the FBI, speaks at a news conference this morning on the campus of the Maryland Transportation Authority regarding the collapse of the Francis Scott Key bridge. (Barbara Haddock Taylor/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • Senator Chris Van Hollen speaks at a news conference this...

    Senator Chris Van Hollen speaks at a news conference this morning on the Maryland Transportation Authority campus near the collapsed Francis Scott Key bridge. Several local and state officials attended. (Barbara Haddock Taylor/Staff)

  • Emergency boats float around a container ship whose bow received...

    Emergency boats float around a container ship whose bow received damage after the Francis Scott Key Bridge crumbled onto the vessel and into the Patapsco River following a collision with the structure overnight. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a container ship. (Kim Hairston/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a container ship. (Teresa Parrott)

  • Part of the fallen structure of Key Bridge is viewed...

    Part of the fallen structure of Key Bridge is viewed from press staging area on Authority Drive in Dundalk (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Part of the fallen structure of Key Bridge is viewed...

    Part of the fallen structure of Key Bridge is viewed from press staging area on Authority Drive in Dundalk (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Part of the fallen structure of Key Bridge is viewed...

    Part of the fallen structure of Key Bridge is viewed from press staging area on Authority Drive in Dundalk (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Mayor Brandon Scott, left, gets a touch up by make-up...

    Mayor Brandon Scott, left, gets a touch up by make-up artist before interview with a news crew after the Key Bridge collapse. (Kenneth K. Lam/Staff)

  • Baltimore mayor Branon Scott, right, talks with Baltimore County Executive...

    Baltimore mayor Branon Scott, right, talks with Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski, Jr., after a news conference about the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge after it was hit by a ship early Tuesday morning. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Gov. Wes Moore speaks at a news conference about the...

    Gov. Wes Moore speaks at a news conference about the Francis Scott Key Bridge which collapsed early Tuesday morning after it was hit by a ship. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and other officials leave a news...

    Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and other officials leave a news conference after speaking about the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge after it was hit by a ship early Tuesday morning. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Maryland Secretary of Transportation Paul Wiedefeld at an early morning...

    Maryland Secretary of Transportation Paul Wiedefeld at an early morning news conference after the Key Bridge collapsed after being struck by a ship early Tuesday morning. (Natalie Jones/Staff)

  • U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Baltimore mayor Brandon Scott and...

    U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Baltimore mayor Brandon Scott and U.S. Senator Chris Van Hollen stand together during a press conference on the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge on Tuesday (Kim Hairston/Staff)

  • Maryland Governor Wes Moore and U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg...

    Maryland Governor Wes Moore and U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg after the press conference where they spoke about the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge on Tuesday. (Kim Hairston/Staff)

  • Maryland Governor Wes Moore and U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg...

    Maryland Governor Wes Moore and U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg after the press conference where they spoke about the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge on Tuesday. (Kim Hairston/Staff)

  • Maryland Governor Wes Moore speaks about the collapse of the...

    Maryland Governor Wes Moore speaks about the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge on Tuesday. With him is U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, members of the congressional delegation and local leaders. (Kim Hairston/Staff)

  • U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg speaks at a press conference...

    U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg speaks at a press conference after the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge on Tuesday. (Kim Hairston/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • The Francis Scott Key bridge in Baltimore collapsed overnight after being struck by a ship in the early morning of Tuesday, March 26. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • Key Bridge has collapsed due to a ship strike. There...

    Key Bridge has collapsed due to a ship strike. There is extended closure and officials are asking everyone to avoid I-695 southeast corridor. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • The Francis Scott Key Bridge lies in ruins in the...

    The Francis Scott Key Bridge lies in ruins in the waters of the Patapsco River after a container ship collided with the structure overnight. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • Emergency crews head toward Fort Armistead after the Francis Scott...

    Emergency crews head toward Fort Armistead after the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed into the Patapsco River after a container ship collided with the structure overnight. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • Emergency crews head to the exit off of the Baltimore...

    Emergency crews head to the exit off of the Baltimore Beltway I-695 from the closed off section where the Francis Scott Key Bridge lies in ruins in the waters of the Patapsco River after a container ship collided with the structure overnight. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • The Maersk container ship Dali and the remains of the...

    The Maersk container ship Dali and the remains of the collapsed Francis Scott Key Bridge are seen at sunrise Tuesday. The massive container ship was adrift early Tuesday as it headed toward the iconic Francis Scott Key Bridge, losing power before colliding with one of the bridge’s support columns. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • The Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed overnight after...

    The Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed overnight after being struck by a ship in the early morning of Tuesday, March 26. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • A remaining ramp of the Key Bridge is seen beyond...

    A remaining ramp of the Key Bridge is seen beyond the Dali container ship after the bridge collapsed this morning after the ship hit the bridge. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • A remaining ramp of the Key Bridge is seen beyond...

    A remaining ramp of the Key Bridge is seen beyond the Dali container ship after the bridge collapsed this morning after the ship hit the bridge. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • The Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed overnight after...

    The Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore collapsed overnight after being struck by a ship in the early morning of Tuesday, March 26. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jasckson/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Karl Merton Ferron)

  • Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after...

    Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapsed early Tuesday morning after a support column was struck by a vessel. (Karl Merton Ferron)

  • Concerned visitors wait for their turn to peer through binoculars...

    Concerned visitors wait for their turn to peer through binoculars toward the Francis Scott Key Bridge which lies in ruins in the waters of the Patapsco River after a container ship collided with the structure overnight. (Karl Merton Ferron/Staff)

  • Fort Armistead Road is closed leading to the Francis Scott...

    Fort Armistead Road is closed leading to the Francis Scott Key Bridge after the bridge collapsed when it was hit by a ship early Tuesday morning. (Amy Davis/Staff)

  • A Coast Guard helicopter over the scene of the Francis...

    A Coast Guard helicopter over the scene of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore after a it collapsed overnight after being struck by a ship in the early morning of Tuesday, March 26. (Jerry Jackson/Staff)

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Tragedy on the bridge

Tuesday was a disheartening, dizzying day of updates and information as Marylanders grasped for reality and authorities pieced together what Mayor Brandon Scott called an “unthinkable tragedy.” Agencies involved ranged from local first responders to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to the U.S. Department of Transportation. Biden gave a White House address Tuesday afternoon, vowing that the federal government would foot the bill for a new crossing.

“I expect the Congress to support my effort. This is going to take some time, but the people of Baltimore can count on us, though, to stick with it every step of the way until the port is reopened and the bridge is rebuilt,” Biden said.

The Coast Guard deployed four boats, as well as a helicopter, to aid in the search and used sonar and underwater drones as part of rescue efforts. In the predawn darkness, some rescue boats and emergency personnel gathered at the boat ramp in Turner Station Park, nestled in a cove on a tributary of the Patapsco.

Divers battled temperatures, tide and darkness as they searched through water, about 50 feet deep, for vehicles or missing people. The National Data Buoy Center reported water temperatures in that area to be about 49 degrees at 4 a.m. — a dangerously cold temperature.

Lt. Col. Roland Butler, superintendent of the Maryland State Police, said surface ships will be on the river overnight while divers plan to continue the search Wednesday at 6 a.m.

The construction crew on the bridge worked for Brawner Builders, whose executive vice president, Jeffrey Prtizker, said in an evening interview with The Baltimore Sun that six of the company’s employees were “presumed dead.”

“It’s a terrible, terrible, unforeseen tragedy,” he said. “None of us could have imagined this could happen. We are all kind of shocked and distressed.”

The crash immediately drew comparisons to the 1980 collapse of Tampa’s Sunshine Skyway, when a 606-foot freighter collided with a support column amid a storm and destroyed the bridge, killing 35 people.

The total of those feared dead Tuesday in Baltimore might have been worse had more cars been on the bridge at the time of the crash.

“These people are heroes,” Gov. Wes Moore said of police who prevented cars from driving onto the bridge. “They saved lives last night.”

Video from the incident shows the container ship, billowing smoke, colliding with the bridge support and much of the structure quickly collapsing. Just before the crash, the ship’s lights appear to turn on and off multiple times.

A Coast Guard briefing report obtained by The Sun stated that “a harbor pilot and assistant were onboard and reported power issues, multiple alarms on the bridge, and loss of propulsion prior to the incident.” U.S. Sen. Ben Cardin told The Sun in a phone interview that indications point to the vessel losing power, causing it to lose steering.

Scott, the mayor, had given his State of the City address Monday night and was still awake at the time of the collision.

“It looked like something out of an action movie,” he said.

‘A long road ahead’

The collision blinked by in seconds. Its consequences will span years.

All vehicle traffic has been rerouted from the bridge, which is part of the Baltimore Beltway, a key traffic artery. Commuters will be funneled into the two cross-harbor tunnels. But some vehicles — like those transporting hazardous materials — can’t use the tunnels and will have to take the long way around.

As of Tuesday afternoon, the Port of Baltimore was still processing trucks inside of its terminals, but vessel traffic into and out of the port was suspended, state Transportation Secretary Paul J Wiedefeld said. The Coast Guard report stated the “Patapsco River channel is fully blocked.”

Sal Mercogliano, a Campbell University professor and former merchant mariner who hosts a YouTube show on shipping, said it could take “weeks, if not months” to clear the channel of bridge debris and open a lane for ships. That will likely have grave consequences on commerce in the region.

“We know that we have a long road ahead, not just in search-and-rescue, but in the fallout from this,” Baltimore County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr. said at a news conference.

Dispatchers first reported a possible vehicle in the water at the Key Bridge around 1:40 a.m., according to audio captured by Broadcastify and reviewed by The Sun. About 12 minutes later, a first responder who reached Fort Armistead Park got on the radio, relaying the unfathomable scene in front of him.

“Be advised, the entire bridge — the entire Key Bridge — is in the harbor,” the person said. “The entire Key Bridge has fallen into the harbor.”

Priscilla Thompson, who lives on the water in Dundalk facing the Key Bridge, was awakened in the middle of the night by the horrible sound of crashing steel.

“I really thought it was an earthquake or something because it shook this house so bad,” she said. “It shook it — it really rattled it — for four or five seconds.”

“And then, it got real quiet,” she said.

Jesus Campos is an employee of Brawner Builders, the company with a crew on the bridge when it collapsed. He used to work on the bridge team, but was recently switched to a different shift.

“I could have been there like my co-workers,” he said in Spanish through a translator.

Investigating a disaster

Those who have seen video of the crash can see that something went awry. The ship appears to lose power, it emits smoke, it crashes. But what exactly went wrong will take time to investigate.

Before ships leave the dock, they typically undergo a series of tests to ensure they are seaworthy. When asked whether Dali had any major deficiencies before taking off, National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homendy said “it’s much too early” to tell.

“That is part of our investigation — where we look, in-depth, at safety information,” she said.

The ship was under the operation of a local pilot, as is required by Maryland law, to guide it through the port. The pilot will undergo drug and alcohol testing as part of the investigation.

But, unlike the Ever Forward incident in 2022 — in which a pilot distracted by his cellphone contributed to the grounding of a container ship in the Chesapeake Bay — the incident appears to be one caused by mechanical, not human error, said Mercogliano, the former merchant mariner. Without power, the pilot and crew would have been unable to navigate, he said.

“When the power goes out — the worst feeling you can have on a ship as a sailor is everything gets quiet,” Mercogliano told The Sun. “That’s the worst. Because that’s the clear sign that everything is about to go wrong.”

All of the ship’s 22 Indian crew members and the two pilots aboard have been “accounted for and there are no reports of any injuries,” according to a statement from Dali’s owners and managers.

According to maritime tracking websites VesselFinder and MarineTraffic, Dali was built in 2015 and had arrived in Baltimore from Norfolk, Virginia. It left the Port of Baltimore around 1 a.m., about a half-hour before the collision.

Dali previously collided with a platform, known as a quay, while leaving the Port of Antwerp in Belgium in July 2016, according to VesselFinder. That caused significant damage to its hull, and it was docked for repairs before returning to duty.

A database of shipping inspections by authorities across the globe indicated that Dali’s most recent inspection, by the Coast Guard in September, reported no deficiencies, according to the data compiled by Equasis, a maritime safety website. The inspection before that was conducted June 27 at the port of San Antonio in Chile and found one deficiency related to “propulsion and auxiliary machinery” such as “gauges, thermometers, etc.” according to Equasis.

As for the bridge itself, which opened in 1977 after five years of construction, Federal Highway Administration records indicate the bridge had been considered in “good” or “fair” condition going back at least three decades. A 2023 Maryland Transportation Authority inspection found the bridge to be in “overall satisfactory condition.”

Moore said the bridge was “fully up to code” and Benjamin W. Schafer, a Johns Hopkins professor of structural and civil engineering who reviewed video of the incident, said he didn’t see anything that immediately stood out as a “red flag” in regard to the bridge’s structural integrity. He called the collapse “more of an acute event.”

The bridge had two supports holding it up; if you take one away, “it’s not a bridge anymore,” he told The Sun.

 

 

A landmark, all but vanished

For residents long accustomed to the Key Bridge, named for the Marylander who wrote the lyrics for “The Star-Spangled Banner,” on the horizon, it was difficult to vocalize their shock.

Thompson, whose backyard looked out onto the bridge, teared up as she gazed at the wreckage as the sun rose. A treasured landmark had all but vanished, likely taking lives with it.

Nearby, Ralph Richards, of Dundalk, reminisced on watching the bridge’s construction as a child living near the waterfront. In disbelief, the 60-year-old studied the place where the bridge once stood.

“To see a blank spot? It reaches in and rips something out,” he said.

This article will be updated. Baltimore Sun Media staff Jeff Barker, Darcy Costello, Michelle Deal-Zimmerman, Hannah Gaskill, Sam Janesch, Natalie Jones, Lorraine Mirabella, Emily Opilo, Jonathan M. Pitts, Angela Roberts, Dillon Mullan and Lia Russell contributed to this article.