Shortly after he heard the news of the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse, the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum’s chief historian, Pete Lesher, immediately sent out a message to his colleagues informing them of one of the Bay’s most catastrophic events in centuries. That early morning email was the first indication that the CBMM should be part of collecting and documenting the Key Bridge’s demiss.
This kind of instinct is characteristic of Pete Lesher as a long-term scholar of the Chesapeake Bay and its culture. Over the years, Pete and the CBMM have led the way for the St. Michaels institution to not only record the past but to capture the present.
In his latest interview with the Spy, Pete talks about the significance of the Key Bridge disaster and the road ahead.
This video is approximately four minutes in length. For more information about the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum please go here.
Totch Hartge says
This is great Pete, as usual. I have a few sites you might like to check out. This really is history while we live it. Thank you sir
Totch Hartge
Charles Barranco says
Pete, quick thinking on your part to memorialize this catastrophic event.
Well Done!
MC Bainbridge says
Of course, Pete would know to do something like this! He is the consummate Chesapeake historian and scholar.
Bishop Joel Marcus Johnson says
Dear Pete – Thank you for the fine outlook. Rather than another bridge awaiting marriage with an even larger ship, what about a tunnel?