1972 Bean Station bus-truck collision | |
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Details | |
Date | May 13, 1972 c. 5:35 a.m. (EDT) |
Location | U.S. Route 11W 5.2 mi (8.4 km) west from Bean Station, Tennessee |
Coordinates | 36°19′52″N 83°22′08″W / 36.33111°N 83.36889°W |
Country | United States |
Operator | Greyhound |
Incident type | Head-on collision |
Cause | Operator error, distracted driving[1] |
Statistics | |
Bus | 1 |
Vehicles | 1 (tractor-trailer) |
Passengers | 27 (bus), 1 (tractor-trailer) |
Deaths | 14 |
Injured | 15 |
The 1972 Bean Station bus-truck collision was a head-on collision involving a double-decker Greyhound bus and a tractor-trailer on U.S. Route 11W in Grainger County, Tennessee, that occurred near the town of Bean Station on the morning of May 13, 1972.[2][3]
Ultimately resulting in 14 deaths, the collision is the deadliest and one of the worst in the history of Tennessee.[4][5] The collision led to outcry from politicians and citizens calling for traffic safety and infrastructure improvements, such as highway widenings, and the completion of Interstate 81 in Tennessee.[6]