Two men were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with apparently non-life-threatening injuries Thursday afternoon after this logging truck ran off Staunton Turnpike near Forsythia Street, about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, apparently over-corrected after running off the right side of the road and the vehicle rolled over, Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said. (Photo by Evan Bevins)
Wood County Sheriff’s deputies and East Wood volunteer firefighters work at the scene of a logging truck accident on Staunton Turnpike about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg Thursday. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, of Parkersburg, and passenger James Vance II, 47, of Mineral Wells, were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with what Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said were believed to be non-life-threatening injuries. (Photo by Evan Bevins)
Two men were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with apparently non-life-threatening injuries Thursday afternoon after this logging truck ran off Staunton Turnpike near Forsythia Street, about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, apparently over-corrected after running off the right side of the road and the vehicle rolled over, Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said. (Photo by Evan Bevins)
Wood County Sheriff’s deputies, East Wood volunteer firefighters and an officer with the West Virginia Public Service Commission’s Transportation Enforcement Division investigate a logging truck crash that occurred before 1 p.m. Thursday on Staunton Turnpike, about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, of Parkersburg, and passenger James Vance II, 47, of Mineral Wells, were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with what Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said were believed to be non-life-threatening injuries. As of Thursday evening, according to Roger Lockhart, WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center’s director of marketing, Eddy had been treated and released, but Vance was still undergoing treatment. (Photo by Evan Bevins)
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Two men were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with apparently non-life-threatening injuries Thursday afternoon after this logging truck ran off Staunton Turnpike near Forsythia Street, about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, apparently over-corrected after running off the right side of the road and the vehicle rolled over, Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said. (Photo by Evan Bevins)
Wood County Sheriff’s deputies and East Wood volunteer firefighters work at the scene of a logging truck accident on Staunton Turnpike about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg Thursday. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, of Parkersburg, and passenger James Vance II, 47, of Mineral Wells, were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with what Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said were believed to be non-life-threatening injuries. (Photo by Evan Bevins)
Two men were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with apparently non-life-threatening injuries Thursday afternoon after this logging truck ran off Staunton Turnpike near Forsythia Street, about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, apparently over-corrected after running off the right side of the road and the vehicle rolled over, Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said. (Photo by Evan Bevins)
Wood County Sheriff’s deputies, East Wood volunteer firefighters and an officer with the West Virginia Public Service Commission’s Transportation Enforcement Division investigate a logging truck crash that occurred before 1 p.m. Thursday on Staunton Turnpike, about two miles east of West Virginia University at Parkersburg. Driver Jeffrey Eddy, 56, of Parkersburg, and passenger James Vance II, 47, of Mineral Wells, were taken by ambulance to WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center with what Wood County Sheriff Steve Stephens said were believed to be non-life-threatening injuries. As of Thursday evening, according to Roger Lockhart, WVU Medicine Camden Clark Medical Center’s director of marketing, Eddy had been treated and released, but Vance was still undergoing treatment. (Photo by Evan Bevins)