Accident Database

Report ID#69286

1998-08-09
accident date
Robert S, Davis
victim
53
victim age
Ocoee
river
Middle
section
Table Saw
location
n/a
gage
Medium
water level
III
river difficulty
Health Problem
cause code(s)
Other
injury type(s)
Other
factors
Private
trip type
Other
boat type
status?
status

Description

Southeast Tennessee ‘s Ocoee River is the most popular Class III+ run in the Southeast. A 53-year-old man drowned on August 8, 1998 after his canoe flipped at Tablesaw Rapid. A friend saw him leave his boat and threw him a rope, but he made no move to get it. Instead, he swam weakly to shore and collapsed in the rocky shallows. A river guide was first on the scene. When his companion, a medical doctor, reached him, he had no pulse. Another doctor joined him as he began CPR. He was taken to a local hospital, then transferred to a medical center where he died the next day. The cause of death was a massive cerebral aneurysm, unrelated to his activity on the river. SOURCE: rec.boats.paddle; phone conversation with Dr. Powell The other incident happened about 11 a.m. Sunday when the canoe Robert S. Davis, 53, of Waynesboro, MS, was paddling turned over near Tablesaw rapid on the Ocoee River. A companion on the trip saw Davis swim free from under the boat and tried to throw him a safety line, but Daivs couldn’t grasp the line. He made his way to some rocks on the side of the river and then became motionless, witnesses say. When his partner, who is a medical doctor, reached him, he had no pulse. Another doctor who was the river joined in the rescue effort and the were able to revive Davis, who was taken to Copper Basin Medical Center. Once Stabilized, Davis was transferred to Erlanger Medical Center where he died Monday. — boater@usit.net East Tennessee’s Ocoee River was the site of fatality on August 8th. A Chattanooga Times article reported that an open canoeist flipped at Tablesaw Rapid. The paddler, who friends say was a very experienced riverman, bailed out and swam. A rope was thrown, but he could not grab hold. He barely made it to shore before he collapsed. His partner, a doctor, began treatment immediately. The victim was transported to a hospital in Chattanooga where he died the next day. An autopsy revealed that a brain aneurysm, not related to the river, was the cause of death. His name is being withheld at his family’s request.