Salesman Killed By
Falling Grain Elevator
In the spring of 1998 a 50-year-old seed salesman
was killed while trying to upright a new portable grain elevator
that had tipped over in a residential street. He purchased the
elevator from a machinery dealership the day before, attached
it to the bumper of his pickup truck, and parked it overnight
in a residential driveway, preparing to tow the machine home the
next morning. The portable elevator was 27 feet long, weighed
1060 pounds, and had a single axle with a wheelbase of six feet.
When leaving the next day, he backed the elevator into a driveway
across the street and then turned too sharp to the left, driving
the left wheel of the elevator over a small snowbank causing the
machine to tip over in the street. The salesman, his son, and
some neighbors tried to lift the machine by hand, but could not.
Then they tied a nylon clothesline rope to the elevator with
its other end tied to a 4-wheel-drive
vehicle sitting in the driveway. While pulling with this vehicle,
and lifting by hand, the men managed to get the end of the elevator
above their heads, but suddenly the rope broke, and the elevator
immediately fell to the ground, striking the victim on the head.
His head injury was severe, and he was pronounced dead after arriving
at the hospital. The elevator hitch was simply a flattened tube
bolted to the bumper of the pickup. It had twisted when the elevator
fell, probably providing significant resistance during the attempt
to raise the elevator by hand. The County Sheriff called for a
wrecker service, who uprighted the elevator with their wrecker
truck.