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At New River Gorge National River, an Iconic Bridge Attracts Suicide Jumpers

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New River Gorge Bridge. Photo by Teke via Wikipedia.

In the predawn darkness of September 9, a 25-year old man from Ohio leaped to his death from the famously high New River Gorge Bridge in West Virginia. The victim’s body was found after daybreak among the boulders below.

Why did this young man choose such a far-from-home place to end his life? Whatever his reasons, we know that he made the choice well in advance. Among the items investigators found in his car were a suicide note, sealed letters for his parents and fiancé, and a Mapquest printout with directions from his home to the bridge.

I‘m not surprised that the young man knew about the bridge, nor would it surprise me to learn that he had personally seen it before. Built in 1980 on U.S. Route 19 near Fayetteville, West Virginia, the New River Gorge Bridge is an architectural icon and one of the most famous bridges in the country.

Soaring higher than in any other vehicular bridge in the western hemisphere (though not as high as the pedestrians-only Royal Gorge Bridge tourist attraction in Colorado) the New River Gorge Bridge is perched a remarkable 876 feet above the river and the CSX railroad. That’s so high that the roughly 300 thrill seeking BASE jumpers who will leap from it during the Bridge Day festival this October 18 can reasonably expect their chutes to open safely. There have been four known BASE-jumper fatalities at the bridge -- one each in 1983, 1986, 1987, and 2006. The 1986 fatality was an illegal jump not associated with Bridge Day.

The New River Gorge Bridge is owned and operated by West Virginia’s highway department, and patrolled by the Fayetteville County Sheriff’s Department. However, it is situated within the boundaries of the New River Gorge National River. Park personnel inevitably become involved in many incidents that originate on the bridge. Thus, while it was a Fayetteville County Deputy Sheriff who found the suicide victim’s abandoned car on the bridge’s southbound shoulder at 4:00 a.m., it was park rangers searching the riverbanks who found the body after daybreak.

Suicide is not common in the national parks, but neither is it a rarity. Hundreds have been recorded in the park system over the decades, including at least 20 in the first six months of this year.

Suicides occur at various parks across America, and the fatal venues seem to have been chosen for convenience in many instances. But parks that inspire feelings of beauty or majesty do get their share of suicides. Grand Canyon National Park, for example, has averaged about three suicides annually in recent years. At least five people have ended their lives at Yellowstone National Park in the past ten years.

Al Nash, Chief of Public Affairs at Yellowstone, agrees with others who’ve observed that some individuals must want to have a connection with a place of beauty, majesty, or solace in their final moments. It’s hard to believe that the New River Gorge Bridge could have inspired such thoughts and feelings at four o’clock in the morning on September 9. Neither was it a convenient place for the young man from Ohio to end his life.

There have been many suicides at the New River Gorge Bridge since it was completed nearly three decades ago. I couldn’t get cumulative statistics, but Candace Tinkler, the park’s Chief of Interpretation and Visitor Services, told me that several suicide jumpers can be expected in a typical year. Whatever the number, it is stressful for the park staff, and they never get used to it.

Rangers receive training in suicide prevention, and some get the chance to use it. Several years ago at New River Gorge, Ranger Randy Fisher used crisis negotiation to save the life of a man who was getting ready to jump from the bridge. For this he received an honorary legislative citation from the state of West Virginia and Governor Joe Manchin. Unfortunately, opportunities to save lives in this way are rare. People bent on suicide at New River Gorge usually just abandon their cars on the bridge and go over the railing into the void.

New River Gorge Bridge appears to attract suicide jumpers in much the same way that the Grand Canyon and the Golden Gate Bridge do. Some people have driven hundreds of miles to end their lives by jumping into the Grand Canyon, and more than 1,200 people have jumped to their deaths from the 71-year old Golden Gate Bridge (some landing within Golden Gate National Recreation Area). There can be no doubt that the Golden Gate’s notoriety as the world’s most popular place to commit suicide has a magnetic appeal for people who want to commit suicide. (A Bay Area resident told me that Golden Gate Bridge authorities ceased publicizing the body count as it neared 1,000 because too many people would be tempted to jump if they thought they would be remembered as Golden Gate suicide victim number 1,000.)

Is there any practical way to prevent people from jumping off the New River Gorge Bridge, or to make it less likely that they will? Higher guard rails, fencing, and netting have been considered in the past, but many
people object to actions that would be cost prohibitive and detract from the bridge's aesthetic appeal. There have been suggestions to install call boxes on the bridge, but nothing has come of it. You’d need a suicide prevention call center, for one thing, and there’s none in the area.

Suicide prevention does not have to be a last-ditch effort taking place on a bridge or rooftop. People contemplating suicide need to know that there is hope and help as long as there is life. Doctors, clergy, family, and friends all have a role to play.

It’s too late, in any event, to help the latest suicide victim at New Rive Gorge. Our heartfelt condolences to this young man’s family, fiancé, and friends.

Comments

There is a couple of mistakes in this article.  The New River Gorge Bridge was built in 1974, not in 1980 and the man who jumped was 35, not 25.  Fayette County keeps a lot of the suicides and other information private to protect the families and to keep from glorifying suicide. My condolences to all who have lost a loved one to Lover's Leap, the cliffs, the river, and the New River Gorge Bridge. 


 I can honestly say Iv had 2 brothers commit suicide,  1 a heart attack, 1 murdered  at convenient  store.All were devastating . But there is something about suicide that you can never get a grasp on,Why? If they knew how devastating it can leave a family,you want to die yourself, it's never ending, it ruins the ones that are left behind. In my case the 1st one was bad enough, why and how did another one do it? We were a very close family and the murder happened 1st, then the 1st suicide happened , then the 2nd, then a heart attack. ALL OUR WORLDS WERE TORE APART, again and again 4 brothers.Only 1 sister and 1 brother left, I'm the baby and I was very spoiled by all of them, so I always think how could they of done this to me, and leave me so alone. I feel mad, sad, and so lonely for them and will never get over this.My one brother after suicide wanted cremation and thrown over The new river bridge, we did it, it was the longest scariest  walk out one that bridge iv ever taken, so I cant evan imagine someone walking out there to jumped.If you read this and see evan commentating to do this, please consider your mother,father wife,husband, brothers sisters, children, and friends.All problems disappear faster than you think. WHEN YOU disappear you can never come back to them, When you look down from heaven and see all the people so ruined, I know you wished you wouldn't of jumped. PRAY


How horrible must it feel to chose not to go on living. Iim just sorry to think anyon could feel so bad that ening thir life sm a viable alternative. I don't s it as selfish,  i think dying is vey personal you hav to fl this is unbearable and  that youre going somewhere  better. None of knows what tomorrow may bring or what temptations await, w shoul tak care whn juging others


A 27 year old loved one is reported to have jumped off this bridge yesterday. Witnesses reported it. His body has not been found. We are devastated. It is not on the news, and it seemed as if they are just waiting to see if his body shows up at the nearby Dam. I feel like this place and the local authorites are covering these things up and doing little to prevent them. Are there no cameras? No call boxes? Some kind of safety net below the bridge? Instead, we are just left with another life lost and another statistic. We all tried to help him and the mental healthcare system failed him repeatedly. Please pray for him and the family and children he left behind. 


My husband suffers from Bipolar Depression and anxiety. He has been in that desperate state of mind several times throughout our marriage. He tells me that he NEVER really wants to end his life. He is pressured by a voice in his head that says "DO IT, before you have time to think not to! He says Its like the devil himself laughing in God's face. No one wants to die. In fact they want to not feel the pain of life's anxieties anymore. Its something that is beyond the scope of anyone who hasn't ever experienced that kind of Depression. Thats why people often say things like its a selfish act. No, Its a desperate act. For those who are suffering all you have to do is tell someone you are suffering. And if someone is telling you they are suffering Take it seriously. Take them to any Emergency Room and get them help. That is exactly what I did for my husband. He didn't know what to do himself. 


I've seen the Golden Gate Bridge, Coronado Bridge of San Diego and Sunshine Skyway of Florida. You cross these bridges, and look down in the waters below. These bridges are some what scary, but also beautiful  looking at the  bay. All these thousands of souls; may God give them peace and comfort now.


Suicide is devastating. For all involved, even tangentially.

Primarily in my medical capacity, I've had to be too close to too much suicide. I've spent long time on the phone with both strangers and friends talking them down when they were ready to self-harm. I can remember having to call a mother in to in the ER  where she essentially grabbed her late-teen sobered up son by the ear, yelling at him all the way out the door--- and a few days later a coworker let me know he had then killed himself. I've had to disarm people intending to self harm. I had to sit in the room with a man who had attempted and failed to kill himself by hanging, when his teenage daughter - who had been the one to find him and cut him down - came in for her first visit.No matter the number of exposures to suicidal ideation over 30+ years, I'll still never claim to understand how and why someone will make that drastic of a decision.

The only thing I can say for those left behind is that in over 90% of the cases there is nothing you could have done differently. If they are going to do it, they will do it.

 

 


The sincere comments about this person's life by the people who knew him or try to understand him are so touching.   He couldn't find the purpose of life.   We all need to find it.  

Best wishes.

Victoria


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