Since I established last time with my post about the Connor Hotel collapse in Joplin in 1978, at least to my own satisfaction, that events that happened within my memory can still be considered history, I'm going to write briefly this time about another incident that occurred in the 1970s: the explosion of a truck loaded with dynamite on I-44 just outside Springfield in late September of 1970. I was in Vietnam at the time. So, I didn't get a lot of information about it when it first happened, although I think I did at least hear about it, even in Vietnam. Perhaps my mother or father mentioned it in a letter. And when I got home to Springfield a few months later, I recall that people were still occasionally talking about it. Where they were when it happened--that sort of thing.
The facts in the case, as reported in newspapers at the time and as they later came out in court, were these: The Teamsters Union was on strike against Tri-State Trucking of Joplin in the fall of 1970, and some of the striking Union workers had started firing rifle shots into the company's trucks as they drove down the highway and otherwise harassing the company's non-union drivers in an apparent effort to force the company back to the bargaining table. On the night of September 29, Bobby Lee Shuler, Gerald Bowen, Mrs. Bowen, and a woman named Mrs. Kimmel started from Joplin in Kimmel's car. Shuler and perhaps the others had been drinking before they left Joplin, and they drove to Springfield and bought more beer. Starting back toward Joplin, they met a Tri-State Truck going the opposite way. At the next overpass, they turned around and overtook the truck, and Shuler and Bowen fired three shots into the grille of the truck as they passed it, thereby disabling it.
The foursome was again on their way back to Joplin in the wee hours of the morning on September 30 when they met two more Tri-State Trucks. They again turned around and passed the vehicles, but this time they raced ahead to the next overpass, crossed it, and stopped the car on the westbound ramp to await the approach of the trucks that were coming toward Springfield in the eastbound lane. (I think the overpass where they stopped was at the Republic exit, although I'd have to check more to be sure.) Shuler got out of the car with his rifle and fired two shots into the grille of the first truck, a flat-bed unit, as it passed. By then, the second truck, which had an enclosed trailer, was near, and Shuler also started firing at it. The first two shots hit the grille, doing little damage, but the third shot apparently went slightly awry. It exploded the trailer, which was carrying almost 43,000 pounds of dynamite, upon impact, and the driver, John Galt, was blown to bits, killing him instantly.
The explosion blew a hole in the road fifty feet wide, seventy feet long, and twenty-five feet deep. The effects of the explosion were felt at least seven miles away, and it was even reported that windows were blown out in Springfield. The Shuler party headed back toward Joplin on I-44 but soon took to the back roads, where they had a flat tire and eventually had to abandon the vehicle. They soon afterwards gave themselves up and were taken into custody. At trial the following year, Shuler claimed he wasn't trying to hurt anybody (even though he must have known the danger of shooting toward a truck carrying dynamite, since he himself had driven such trucks), but he was convicted of 2nd degree murder and received a sentence of 99 years in prison. Bowen was also convicted, presumably of a lesser charge, and got ten years in prison.
Information and comments about historical people and events of Missouri, the Ozarks region, and surrounding area.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Bob Rogers: A Desperate Outlaw and a Reckless Villain
Another chapter in my new book, Murder and Mayhem in Northeast Oklahoma https://amzn.to/48W8aRZ , is about Rob Rogers and his gang. Rogers i...
-
The Ku Klux Klan, as most people know, arose in the aftermath of the Civil War, ostensibly as a law-and-order organization, but it ended up ...
-
After the dismembered body of a woman was found Friday afternoon, October 6, 1989, near Willard, authorities said “the crime was unlike...
-
As I mentioned recently on this blog, many resorts sprang up in the Ozarks during the medicinal water craze that swept across the rest of th...
23 comments:
Fascinating story. I'd never heard of that.
My dad told me this story and i got more interested, especially when i drive by there a lot. Pretty scary.
My dad told me this story and i got more interested, especially when i drive by there a lot. Pretty scary.
I was 7 and remember the house and windows rattling and we lived close to the Battlefield Mall in Springfield. Couldn't remember the whole story thanks for sharing.
I remember the event. Took out a major portion of the highway and the poor drivers life. As Billy Joel sang 'and the union people drove awayyyy'.
I remember that happening. I was 9 yrs old and we lived in Republic . My parents had a gas station which had living quarters above it on the second floor. On the first floor there were 3 or 4 large windows which were blown out by that explosion.
Chris Murchie
I remember,, It shook the windows 50 mile away, Stuckey's roof was blown off and my favorite bee hive didn't survive.
I also remember when the powder plant blew up, the ground shook under our feet.
The vapor / smoke cloud was tremendous
BJ Branch
Three Gables, Chris Murchie?
My grandfather was the Missouri State Patrolman that caught those responsible. He tracked them by following the grooves in the road from where their tires ran flat.
My dad was an over the road driver for Consolidated Freightways out of St. Louis. He crossed the picket line because he had a family to feed and we would have lost everything. He was gone five weeks, and he wasn't even allowed to call my mother out of safety fears. He told my mother that the convoy he was in was escorted by highway patrols in the various states. When he got back to St. Louis someone had poured sugar in his car and it had to have a new engine put in. At least he was safe.
Yes I believe Three Gables was the name of the station we lived in.
I grew up one block down Harrison St. from 3 Gables. I was 19 at the time of the explosion, though.
I was 10 at the time but still remember it as if it was yesterday. My Dad operated the Three Gables gas station then.
My Grandmother lived in Clever, about 12 miles south of Republic. The explosion was just west of the Republic overpass. She heard the explosion. I was a student at Ozark Bible College in Joplin at the time. I can still remember having to drive into the westbound lanes, and the different colored pavement of the repair, visible into the 80's.
The date is not correct. The I44 truck explosion happened nearer 1967. I remember driving around the detour. in 1070, I was in the military.
Thanks for your input, but the date is correct. I, too, was in the military in 1970, which is how I remember for sure. Plus I researched this incident before I wrote about it.
I was sixteen years old when that explosion happened in the fall of 1970. My parents lived near Barnes General Store. Which is located right off of west 266 highway. About 4 miles from where the Republic exit is. We heard it and felt it . We drove over there the next morning and it was so horrible! I found a small piece of the seatbelt. I will never forget that day. Or the Vietnam war!
It's a proven fact sugar in the gas tank will not mess up an engine
So you are calling all the news and news papers liars. It happened 09/30/1970
It was 1970.
Remember the incident well. The date in the story is correct. I was 14 and up in the very early morning getting ready to roll newspapers for carrier Paul V. Shaw And Spfd Daily News. Was just leaving the bathroom and I heard a deep loud rumble that lasted about 3-5 seconds. Moments later noticed the curtains in the bathroom had gone from a hanging position to a 90 degree angle exposing the window and was able to see outside beyond the window. The curtains remained at that angle defying gravity for a few seconds and then dropped to a normal hanging position. The window was not open. My boss Paul showed up a few minutes later to pick me up so I could roll his newspapers and he would throw them . His police radio in the station wagon was going nuts with activity!! We drove to the newspaper office to pick up our n-paper bundles and we heard alarms in all the retail establishments that had their windows blown out.
Years later in early 1980s in the break room of a Nu Way market Southeast Kansas I ran into the widow. She was still grieving.
My dad was driving a truck for Tri State hauling dynamite and was several miles behind his co worker when he was blown to bits. I was only a small child at the time but remember my dad telling the story about how it could have easily been him
I was 10, and also in Republic. Remember it well to this day. Terrible thing.
Post a Comment