Mr Hough, who was driving his car, suffered severe cuts about the head and face,internal injuries about the chest, and his left arm and his right leg were both broken. He lived for several minutes after the wreck, and was conscious at least part of the time. When he was moved out of the car, he asked that he be lifted up. This was done and he was supported in a sitting position,but in a few moments he fell over and died.
Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan and all the Negroes were carried by passing motorists to the Hamlet hospital. Mrs. Sullivan suffered a fracture at the base of the skull, a broken jaw and severe cuts where her head went through the windshield. The lower side of her face was almost torn off. Mr. Sullivan was badly broken up about the chest where he was thrown against the steering wheel of his car when the impact came. Mr. Sullivan appears to be 55 to 60 years old and his wife is apparently about the same age.
Bud Willoughby suffered a broken arm and several cuts about the head and face.
Rob Willoughby was injured seriously about the chest.
Joe Smith was cut severely about the left eye and was badly bruised.
Henry Lomax suffered cuts and bruises.
J. K. Wall was very little injured and was able to leave the hospital Tuesday afternoon after being treated.
The accident happened about half a mile west of the Pee Dee river, on the curve just where the road to Pee Dee begins to bear away from No. 20 highway. Mr. Hough, with the Negroes, was on his way to his sawmill near Clarkton, in the eastern part of the state, in a Chevrolet coach. Mr Sullivan, in a Lincoln sedan, was driving west toward Wadesboro. The cars met, according to the looks of the pavement, almost in the middle of the road, and the right side of the front of each car suffered the main force of the impact, which was terrific. Apparently each car was, to some extent, on the other man’s side of the road. The Chevrolet was almost demolished, the engine being driven back, all glass broken, and the entire body broken up. The front of the Lincoln was driven in and the windshield broken.
Possibly the exact cause of the tragedy will never be known, but Sheriff J. Flake Martin and Mr. Ben Hough went to Hamlet Tuesday afternoon and talked to the Negroes who were able to talk. They said that Mr. Hough was on his side of the road driving at his ordinary speed, probably about 30 miles an hour. And they saw the Lincoln approaching at terrific speed and on their side of the road. I looked as if the big car would hit them, and at the last moment Mr. Hough pulled over to the left in an attempt to avoid the collision, which occurred nevertheless. What was in Mr. Hough’s mind can not be known, but it was at the point in the highway where a car going west and to Pee Dee would begin to pull over to the left, and he may have thought the Sullivan car was going to Pee Dee, and therefore pulled over to his left. Men who saw the speedometer of the Lincoln car after the wreck, say it was hung up at more than 75 miles an hour, and if it was going at that speed it may have been impossible to keep on the inside of the road.
Mr. K. Van Gulledge, of Gulledge Township, was the first person to arrive on the scene after the wreck. He says it was a terrible sight. Mr Hough was lying in the car with his head hanging out of the right hand door. All the Negroes had been thrown from the car, and several of them were lying unconscious. Mr Sullivan was sitting behind the wheel in his car in a natural position, although he probably was unconscious. Mr Gulledge was unable to do anything worth while to save their lives and he hurried down to filling stations at the bridge to phone for help. The phone was out of fix. By the time he got back to the scene, others had arrived and the injured were being taken out of the cars.
A passing motorist hurried to Lilesville and summoned Dr. Wyatt there and phoned to Wadesboro for ambulances, and in the meantime other motorists carried the injured to Hamlet. Dr. J. D. Maynard was among the first to arrive, he having started on trip to the eastern part of the state, but he had no instruments and was able to do little Mr. Sullivan formerly lived in Rockingham, where he was connected with one of the mills there, but for several years he had lived in Charlotte, being engaged in the dye stuffs business.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Frankie Staton Hough. and by the following sons and daughters: Everette Hough, of Hot Springs, Va.; Preston Hough, of Clarkton; Ben Hough, of Wadesboro; Wat Hough, of Andrews,S.C.; Ben Hough, of Wadesboro; Misses Eula B.,Edna and Addie Hough, at home. Surviving also are one sister Mrs H. H. Cox, and two brothers, Messrs. W.R. Hough, of Lilesville, and Ed. Hough.
He was a good citizen, dignified and conservative in his bearing, honorable in all his dealings, having the respect and esteem of all who knew him. He was a member of the Baptist church. He had a reputation as a careful automobile driver, and only last Monday, in a conversation on the corner, he said that he had only one life to live, and that he intended to drive carefully. He made it a rule never to go faster than 35 miles an hour and to keep on his side of the road.
The funeral was held Wednesday afternoon at the Hough residence here by Dr B. F. Bray and Rev. M. L. Dorton, of Badin, in the presence of a large gathering of friends and relatives, and interment was in Eastview cemetery, where the body was laid to rest beneath a mound of beautiful flowers.
Article from a Wadesboro Newspaper which was found in the Local History Genealogy Files in the Wadesboro library collection