A carnival ride at an annual fair in California celebrating the popular Calaveras county jumping-frog contest collapsed on Friday, injuring all 24 people aboard.
Three were airlifted to hospitals in Modesto and Sacramento, but the extent of their injuries was not immediately known, said Sergeant Dave Seawell, a spokesperson for the Calaveras county sheriff’s department.
Most of the riders were children, and all were injured, he said.
The carnival ride, called the Yo-Yo, collapsed shortly after 6pm local time on Friday at the Calaveras County Fair and Jumping Frog Jubilee, about 130km south-east of Sacramento.
The ride has metal arms, each with a seat at the end attached by a chain, that swing outward as the ride picks up speed. The arms rise and fall as they spin around a centre pole, putting the seats horizontal to the ground.
The pole apparently collapsed, causing the arms to crash back toward the centre, said Dennis Townsend, a chief in the Calaveras county unit of the California department of forestry and fire prevention.
”The mechanism that lifts the people is the one that collapsed,” he said.
The riders were hurt when their seats struck the ground or other parts of the machine, he said. Authorities could not immediately determine what might have caused the accident.
Townsend did not know whether anyone on the ground was injured.
The fair remained open after the accident, but the carnival area was shut down, said Laurie Giannini, the fairground’s marketing director.
The Calaveras County Fair and Jumping Frog Jubilee opened on Wednesday and is held each year in late May. It was inspired by a Mark Twain story, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, which focuses on a character and his jumping frog, named Dan’l Webster.
The fictional frog-jumping contest is rigged in one gambler’s favour when he secretly fills his opponent’s frog with buckshot.
The Calaveras county fairgrounds are located just outside the Gold Rush-era town of Angels Camp in the Sierra Nevada foothills. It bills itself as an ”old-fashion county fair” with exhibits and a variety of entertainment.
Last year’s jumping-frog contest drew 4 000 entries. This year’s final is scheduled for Sunday. — Sapa-AP