March 1 – United States – The Wellington, Washington avalanche: in
Wellington, near the
Cascade Tunnel,
Washington, approximately 100 were killed when a snow
avalanche pushed two trains off a cliff. The trains were stopped at a mountain depot; the passenger train was halted by an avalanche ahead of it, and then trapped by an avalanche behind it. Passengers and rail employees mostly stayed on board the stopped trains, which were subsequently struck squarely by another avalanche.
March 30 – Germany – The luxury Lloyd Express from
Hamburg to
Genoa, overran signals at
Mülheim an der Ruhr due to the driver's error and collided with a troop train going to
Metz (now in France); 20 were killed and 41 seriously injured.[3]
June 9 – Canada – A freight train derailed near
Marathon, Ontario killing three people. The locomotive and boxcars plunged into
Lake Superior, sinking in 235 feet (72 m) of water. They were discovered in 2016 and 2014 respectively.[4]
June 18 – France – On the
Chemins de fer de l'État, a local train from
Paris stopped at
Villepreux –
Les Clayes station due to engine trouble—fortunately, with many of the passengers waiting on the platform—when an express for
Granville overran signals and crashed into it at about 60 mph (100 km/h); at least 18 people were killed and 90 injured. The driver of the express was chased from the scene by an angry crowd and later arrested.[5]
June 23 – Mexico – On the
Manzanillo line, the rear four cars of a troop train broke free and ran away backwards; 37 people were killed and 50 injured.[5]
August 14 – France – At
Saujon on the
Paris-Orléans Railway, an excursion train from
Bordeaux collided with a freight train; 43 people were killed and 50 injured, most of them young girls.[5]
September 21 – United States – A southbound
interurban car on the
Fort Wayne and Wabash Valley was driven past the point where it should have waited for an empty northbound car. The two trains collided killing 34.[8]
October 4 – United States – Due to a heavy passenger load for the
Veiled Prophets parade at
St. Louis, a southbound
interurban train on the
Illinois Traction System was operated in two sections. The motorman of a northbound train that was supposed to wait for it at
Staunton, Illinois, failed to understand this and collided with the second section in the worst accident ever to an interurban in the U.S; 36 were killed.[8]
November 15 – United Kingdom – An express freight train overran signals and crashed into the rear of another freight train at
Darlington,
County Durham. The driver may have fallen asleep at the controls.[9]
December 24 – United Kingdom – Hawes Junction rail crash,
Cumbria, England: A busy signalman forgot about a pair of
light engines on the main line and allowed an express train to follow them into the same section, causing a collision which killed 12.
December 24 – United Kingdom – At
Bolsover, England, a group of children got onto a level crossing through an open wicket gate and were struck by a train; three were killed and three injured.[8]
December 24 – France – At
Montereau on the
PLM railway, an express from
Paris to
Modane collided with a freight train, killing one crew member and injuring seven passengers.[8]
August 13 – United States –
Fort Wayne, Indiana: The
Pennsylvania Railroad's Penn Flyer derailed at Fort Wayne. Almost immediately, the derailed equipment was struck by an oncoming freight train, killing four and injuring 57.
August 25 – United States – A broken rail on a bridge in
Rochester, New York resulted in two passenger cars falling over the side killing 28 passengers; a majority of them were Civil War veterans.[15]
October – United States –
Hampstead, New Hampshire: two freight trains collided head-on, killing engineer Allen Bradley[16]
November 23 – France – A bridge collapsed under a passenger train at
Montreuil-Bellay, killing 22 people.[17]
December 13 – United Kingdom – A freight train ran away near
Wombwell,
Yorkshire and crashed into wagons being shunted at Darfield Main killing two.[18][19]
December 15 – United Kingdom – A freight train derailed near Lartington Quarry,
County Durham when the driver stopped too severely. During recovery operations, a steam crane overturned.[20]
1912
January 11 – United States –
Hempstead, New York – A milk train runs into the back of a stationary passenger car at
Hempstead (LIRR station) sending it past the end of the line, across
Fulton Avenue into the O. L. Schwenke Land & Investment Company Building. One operator and one conductor were killed.[21]
January 16 – United States –
Chunky, Mississippi – Alabama & Vicksburg Railway passenger train no. 1 crashes in a creek. One person is killed with a few injured. 80 passengers were on board the westbound train.
March 18 – United States –
San Antonio, Texas – A
Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railroad locomotive, Number 704, suffers a
boiler explosion at the
Southern Pacificroundhouse, killing 36 to 41 people and injuring another 50 in the deadliest locomotive explosion in United States history.[22] The locomotive had been damaged in an incident at Seguin on December 18, 1911, and was being returned to service following repairs when the explosion occurred.
March 23 – Canada – At a location named Birch on the Lake Superior Division of the Canadian Pacific Railway, eastbound and westbound freight trains collide. The eastbound train passed Birch instead of waiting there for the train meet. According to the article, two train crew members died, another was missing and two others were seriously injured.[23]
July 5 – United States – On the
Ligonier Valley Railroad, a train order was issued for an
excursion train making the 1.5-mile (2.4 km) trip from
Ligonier, Pennsylvania to a fairground to wait for a coal train going the other way. The excursion train consisted of a single car being pushed from behind. It proceedes against the order and collides with the coal train, crushing the car between the two locomotives. 19 passengers and 3 crewmen were killed[25]
August 29 – United Kingdom – a light engine collides with a rake of nine carriages at
Vauxhall. One passenger is killed and 43 injured.[26]
September 17 – United Kingdom – Ditton Junction rail crash: A driver misreads signals resulting in 15 deaths.
January 1 – United States – Guyandotte River bridge accident: A too heavy locomotive crossed onto the
Guyandotte River bridge, which was being repaired causing the bridge to collapse, killing an engineer and six workmen.[28]
January 2 – United States – A horse and buggy with a family of four is struck by a Rock Island Railroad train at a grade crossing two miles (3.2 km) north of
Belleville, Kansas. The wife and 2 children were killed and the husband dies of injuries.[29]
April 30 – British India – At
Borgaon Manju, a local train from
Bhusawal,
Bombay Province, to
Nagpur,
Central Provinces, crashed at 30 mph (50 km/h) into the rear of a stationary goods train. The first six-passenger cars were destroyed and at least forty people were killed and many injured.[25]
May 11 – Bulgaria – At
Drama, the rear 25 cars of a military train broke free and rolled back towards
Buk. The runaway cars crashed into a 28-car train also full of soldiers, killing 150 people and injuring 200.[25]
June 25 – Canada – A train heavily loaded with immigrants derailed near
Ottawa killing eight and injuring approximately 50.[32]
July 12 – United Kingdom – A
Great Eastern Railway express train ran into the rear of a light engine at
Colchester,
Essex due to a signalman's error, killing three people and injuring fourteen.[33]
July 26 – Denmark – Bramminge train accident: A train derailed near
Bramming, due to heat-stressed rails, killing fifteen and injuring about 80.
September 2 – United Kingdom – Ais Gill rail crash,
Cumbria, England: A distracted engine crew passed signals at danger, and crashed into a train stalled on gradient killing fourteen and seriously injuring 38.
September 2 – United States – Due to heavy holiday weekend traffic on the
New Haven Railroad, the westbound Bar Harbor Express and White Mountain Express were each running in two sections. A local train ahead of all four expresses stopped at
Wallingford, Connecticut, delaying the expresses, but the overtired engineer of the third express missed his signal and crashed into the one ahead killing 26.[36]
September – France – A 3-car electric train derailed on a viaduct at
Villeneuve-Loubet and at least one car crashed into the ravine, killing 20 people and injuring 40. News reports blame "the imperfect working of the magnetic brake because of a storm", though this seems to make no sense.[36]
October 22 – Canada – A
Canadian Pacific Railway work train and an eastbound freight train collided near Wayland, west of Chapleau, Ontario on CP's Lake Superior Division killing five crew members and injuring seven.[38][39]
November 4 – France – On the
PLM Railway, the driver of a southbound mail train from
Paris missed seeing two signals. At
Melun, the train entered a side track by crossing over the northbound main line, and collided with a northbound express from
Marseille killing 39, including 15 postal workers.[42]
December 6 – Romania – One hundred people are killed by a collision at
Costești.[43]
1914
March 13 – Australia – Exeter crossing loop collision,
New South Wales. A freight train entering the Exeter station collided head-on with a mail train being removed from the track in anticipation of the arrival of the freight train. Fourteen people were killed in the accident.
April 2 – Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) – At Tanjong-Prioh, a passenger train is derailed by a
buffalo on the track; it damages a bridge, which collapses, and the locomotive and first 5 cars go into the river, killing 20 people and injuring 50. The European passengers on the train are all in the rear cars and are unhurt.[43]
June 17 – United Kingdom – An excursion train departs from
Reading station,
Berkshire against signals. An express passenger train is in a sidelong collision with it, killing one person.[45]
June 18 – United Kingdom – Baddengorm Burn,
Carr Bridge, Scotland: Cloudburst washed away the foundations of a bridge, which collapsed as a passenger train crossed it. The train split in two, with one coach falling into the burn, drowning 5 people.[46]
June 27 – United Kingdom – A
South Eastern and Chatham Railway passenger train departs from
Cannon Street station, London against a danger signal and collides with another train. One person is killed.[40]
August 5 – United States – At
Tipton Ford, Missouri, on the
Kansas City Southern Railway, a train order is issued for a northbound
Missouri and North Arkansas Railroad gasoline motor car to stop and wait for a southbound KCS passenger train. The motor car proceeds and collides head-on with the train at a combined speed of 70 mph (110 km/h), and is enveloped in flames from the gasoline. There are 38 passengers and 5 employees killed, many burnt beyond recognition, and 34 passengers and 4 employees are injured.[43]
October - Many British and French wounded when a Red Cross train crashes into Marne River after Imperial Germans destroy the Mary Bridge.[48]
December – Austria-Hungary – At
Kalush (now in Ukraine), two Austrian troop trains collide, one carrying troops from Prussia and the other carrying wounded officers from the Eastern Front, after a switch is thrown at the last moment. More than 20 cars are smashed, about 400 people killed and 500 injured. Several railwaymen are arrested for treason.[47][49]
1915
January 1 – United Kingdom – Ilford rail crash: The 7:06 express from
Clacton to London passed both distant and home signals. The express crashed into the side of a local train that had been crossing the tracks. 10 killed, 500 injured (including those reporting shock).
22 January - Mexico - Guadalajara train disaster, In Guadalajara,
Mexico, a passenger train derailed due to a break failure, over 600 people were killed.[50]
March 18 – United Kingdom – A
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway express passenger train overruns signals and is in a rear-end collision with an empty stock train at
Smithy Bridge,
Lancashire. Four people are killed and 33 are injured.[51]
May 22 – United Kingdom – In the Quintinshill rail crash near
Gretna Green, Scotland, a troop train collides with a stationary passenger train and another passenger train crashes into the wreckage, which also involves two stationary freight trains. The passenger cars are wooden-bodied and a serious fire ensues. The stationary passenger train was forgotten by a careless signalman, who had himself arrived on it, following improper operating practices during a shift change at this busy location. This is the deadliest railway accident in British history, with 226 fatalities and 246 people injured.
August 14 – United Kingdom – Weedon rail crash: Express train derails after the track on the up main line is forced out of alignment by a detached coupling rod from a passing locomotive heading a down express. 10 passengers killed, 21 injured.
October 19 – France – At
Saint-Cyr-de-Favières, on the
PLM railway, between
Roanne and
Lyon, several coaches of a derailed train fall into a deep ravine, killing seventeen soldiers.[52]
November 22 – United States – A train carrying traveling circus from Atlanta, Georgia to Girard, Alabama collided with a passenger train that had ignored a signal to stop at a junction near Columbus, Georgia. There were no fatalities on the passenger train. Reports conflict, but between 15 and 24 people aboard the circus train were killed. Most of the circus animals were killed in the resulting fires.[53][54]
December 15 – United Kingdom – A landslide near
Warren Halt,
Kent buries three people. A
South Eastern and Chatham Railway train is derailed inside Martello Tunnel. The line is closed until 1 August 1919.[55]
December 17 – United Kingdom – St Bedes Junction rail crash: A passenger train collided with a banking engine in thick fog and another train crashed into the wreckage; 19 were killed.
1916
January 30 – Germany – Between
Cologne and
Duisburg, a hospital train full of wounded soldiers collided with an express, and one of the locomotives climbs on top of the other train. Officially only two people are killed, but reports of eyewitnesses arriving in Amsterdam disagree.[56]
March 29 – United States –
Amherst, Ohio: An overnight
New York Central Railroad express eastbound from
Chicago to
Pittsburgh was operating in two sections; when the first was stopped by a signal, the second one ran into it at 50 mph (80 km/h), the wreckage fouled the next track, and the westbound 20th Century Limited, also at 50 mph, ran into it. 26 people aboard the eastbound trains were killed. It is disputed whether the signal was set against the second section.[56]
June 2 – United States –
Dayton Township, Butler County, Iowa:
Rock Island Railroad passenger train No. 19 crashed at
Flood Creek after a bridge collapsed. The normally shallow creek had sustained significant rain the day of the crash, and the flooded creek had caused the supports on the bridge to break. On the stormy night of June 2, 1916, as train No. 19 passed through
Packard, and crossed Flood Creek on the bridge near
Clarksville, the locomotive, tender, and several passenger cars made it across before the bridge collapsed under the rest of the train causing the immediate death of 16, and later the death of another passenger from his injuries. According to lifelong Clarksville resident, Francis Edeker, on the night of the crash, survivors of the crash on one side of the creek sought shelter at Francis's grandparents' house where they were treated for injuries.[61]
June 2 – United States –
Negaunee,
Michigan:
Lake Superior and Ishpeming2-8-0No. 14 figured in a washout wreck while coming down a 1.6% grade, pulling over 40 loaded
hoppers of
ironore.[62] The locomotive and several of its hoppers tumbled down on their sides on a steep embankment. The possible cause of this accident was the significant rain that caused a lot of floods in some of the
Midwest areas that day, which was also the cause of the No. 19 wreck in Iowa. According to The Railway and Locomotive Historical Society Bulletin No. 98 by Aurele A. Durocher,[63] it took about a month to get the 14 re-railed, repaired, and brought back to service. Some of the derailed hoppers were presumably scrapped. It is unclear if the
engineer,
fireman, or leading
brakeman were injured or killed. The 14 locomotive was repaired and is currently preserved at the
Grand Canyon Railway as No. 29.
August 12 – United States – Brookdale, Pennsylvania: A runaway train collides with an interurban on the
Southern Cambria Railway, killing 26 people.[56]
September 26 – Austria-Hungary – between
Medzilaborce and
Łupków: a train of
tank cars laden with
gasoline collided at speed with a
hospital train carrying sick and wounded soldiers home from the
Eastern Front. The two trains caught fire and burned for two days. Officially 140 people were killed. Unofficial estimates suggest that the death toll may have been as much as twice that number.[64]
December 1 – Austria-HungaryHerceghalom rail crash – At Herczechalen (now
Herceghalom, Hungary), an express from
Vienna to
Budapest, carrying many soldiers back from the funeral of
Emperor Franz Joseph I, collided with a local train, killing 66 people and injuring 150. It is suggested that a signal was missed in the dark because of the inferior fuel available in wartime for the oil-burning signal lamps.[66]
December 19 – United Kingdom – At
Kiltimagh,
Ireland, on the
Great Southern and Western Railway, the driver of a train of 21 wagons loaded with
ballast either missed or misread a danger signal and crashed into a train of empty wagons, killing five railwaymen and injuring seven.[67]
December 19 – United Kingdom – At
Wigan, England, on the
London and North Western Railway, the 11:15 pm train from
London caught up with the late-running 10:00 pm train from London while the latter was reversing into a bay platform. The second train had two locomotives. The first driver apparently missed the signals set against his train, and the second one was unable to see them due to smoke and steam from the first engine. The trains collided, killing a crewman and a postal worker and injuring 11 people, mostly crew and postal workers.[66][68]
December 19 – United Kingdom – On the
Caledonian Railway, a northbound postal train collided with a slower-moving goods train between
Kirkpatrick and
Kirtlebridge, Scotland, despite signals and
detonators that should have stopped the second train at Kirkpatrick. One railwayman was killed and one seriously injured.[66][69]
1917
January 3 – United Kingdom – Ratho rail crash: The unsafe use of hand signals results in 12 deaths.
January 13 – Romania – Ciurea rail disaster at
Ciurea: A passenger train overloaded with soldiers and refugees runs away down a bank between
Bârnova and Ciurea, derailing at Ciurea station after being diverted onto a loop line. Between 600 and 1,000[citation needed] killed in the derailment and subsequent fire.
January 17 – France –
Massy – Palaiseau: A British troop train of 40 (presumably unbraked) cars, taking soldiers from
Paris back to the front, comes apart into two portions, which then collide back together on a gradient; 10 people are killed and 30 injured.[66]
January 19 – Austria-Hungary – At Sagor (now
Zagorje ob Savi, Slovenia), a mail train from
Trieste to
Vienna is wrecked by a rockslide, part buried and part falling into the
Sava River. A rescue train is sent but collides with the wreckage. Altogether, 40 people are killed.[70]
February 27 – United States –
Mount Union, Pennsylvania: A passenger train is rear-ended by a freight causing a
telescope to occur. Twenty are killed in the accident.[71]
July 2 – United States – The
Milwaukee Railroad's coast train, the Olympia, derailed across the river from
LaCrosse, Wisconsin when the engineer A. B. Brown ignored the closed semaphore signal. The engine and tender and four cars were damaged.[72]
July 23 – British India – When a passenger train is stopped by track damage, a messenger is sent to bring a repair crew, but then it proves possible to repair the track. The train resumes its journey and collides with the repair train, killing 20 people.[70]
August 7 – Italy – An express from
Genoa to
Milan derails in
Arquata Scrivia station, killing 34 people and injuring about 100.[70]
August 13 – Russia – A passenger train and a "luggage train" collide on the line from
Moscow to Petrograd (now
Saint Petersburg), killing 60 people and injuring 150.[73]
August 19 - United Kingdom - A tram runs away and derails at the foot of Crabble Road, Dover. 11 are killed and 61 injured. The accident is deemed to be a result of driver error and inexperience, compounded by the tram being severely overloaded.[74][75]
September 24 – United Kingdom – Bere Ferrers rail accident: New Zealand troops travelling from
Plymouth on the
London and South Western Railway are told that two from each
compartment should get off at the first stop,
Exeter, to get food. The train is stopped by signals at Bere Ferrers. With the rear cars stopped outside the station, men in them assume this is Exeter and jump to ground level, using the same doors they boarded through, which puts them on the other track, where 10 are killed by an express from
London to Plymouth.[77]
October 20 – United States – Clyde, New York – (Newspapers: Syracuse Herald, The Clyde Herald, and The Clyde Times) Mr. Barney Fredendall was struck by the N.Y.C. train and killed instantly. Part of the body was found east of the Glasgow Street crossing. One leg was found at Savannah. The other was not found.
November 2 – Russia –
Vladikavkaz: An express passenger train and a military train collide head-on, killing 25 people (mostly soldiers) and severely injuring 70.[73]
December 12 – France – Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne derailment, (
Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne near
Modane on the
Culoz–Modane railway): Carrying French troops from Italy, a grossly overloaded military train derails near the entrance of the station at Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne, after running away down a steep gradient from the entrance of the
Fréjus Tunnel; brake power was insufficient for the weight of the train. Of those killed in the derailment and subsequent fire, 423 soldiers and 2 train employees were identified, but at last 675 and possibly 800 were killed altogether. The military had forced the driver to run the overloaded train. This accident is still the worst ever in France.[78]
December 14 – United States – Two
Southern Railway passenger trains collide at 0815 hrs. near
Clemson College, South Carolina with the fireman and baggageman on one (train no. 46) killed, both engines demolished and cars leaving the rails and one overturning down an embankment. Train Nos. 43 and 46 strike each other on a curve, one mile (1,600 m) north of
Calhoun, South Carolina. Blame was laid on an operator's failure to give orders to the crew of Train No. 46 at
Seneca, South Carolina.[79]
December 29 – United States – Two
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad passenger trains collide a mile (1600 m) east of
North Vernon, Indiana, killing eight people and injuring 21. The trains met in a head-on collision, each emerging from a curve with only about 500 feet (150 m) of straight track between them.[80]
1918
January 8 – Germany – A train carrying troops going on leave collides with another train between
Kaiserslautern and
Homburg, killing at least 30 and injuring at least 100.[81]
January 16 – Germany – At
Kirn, a flash flood in the river
Nahe caused by a dam failure washes out an embankment, and several cars of a train go into the water. Only 10 bodies are found in the first few days, but eventually the death toll is reported as 25, with 25 injured.[81]
January 16 – Germany – At
Bohmte on the line between
Bremen and
Osnabrück, two trains collide in a snowstorm; 33 are killed and 110 injured, all soldiers.[81]
January 18 – Germany – At Argeningkem (now Artyomovka,
Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia) in
East Prussia, south of Tilsit (now
Sovetsk, Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia), a train carrying soldiers on leave collides with a passenger train, killing 23 people and injuring 50.[81]
January 18 – United Kingdom – Two
Cambrian Railways freight trains were in a head-on collision at Park Hall,
Shropshire, killing one railwayman. Both drivers were found to have
tablets for the same section, but investigation did not reveal how this was even possible. At least one of the signalmen at Oswestry North and Ellesmere Junction signal boxes must have behaved irregularly, and suspicion fell on the design of the circuitry connecting their boxes.[83][84]
February 7 – Austria-Hungary – A fire on board a crowded train from Stanislav (now
Ivano-Frankivsk) to Lvov (now
Lviv) brings it to a stop at midnight on a bridge between Jezupol and Wodniki (now
Yezupil and Vodnyky; all these places are now in Ukraine). Many people are killed, including passengers who jump into the
Dniester River and drown.[81]
March 15 – United States – Two women passengers are killed and 30–40 others sustain cuts and bruises when WB train No. 19 of the
Pennsylvania Railroad is struck by a rock slide in a cut near
Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, with a large boulder overturning two Pullman cars in the middle of the consist.[85]
April 11 – France – Twenty-nine men of the 4th Battalion
Kings Liverpool Regiment were killed in a troop train explosion. They were buried in the military cemetery at Chocques in the Pas de Calais.[86]
April 15 – United States –
Central Islip, New York (now
Islandia, New York) –
Long Island Rail Road troop train leaving
Camp Upton derails at Foot's Crossing (now the
NY 454 bridge). Originally believed to be a result of enemy sabotage, but later found to be caused by defective rails. 3 soldiers dead and 36 soldiers injured.[21]
April 18 – United Kingdom – A
London Brighton and South Coast Railway freight train becomes divided with the result that four wagons come to rest in Redhill Tunnel,
Surrey. A signalman's error allows the following train to crash into the wagons. The line is blocked for two days.[76]
May 10 – United States – As a troop train carrying the advance guard of the
321st Infantry departs
Camp Jackson,
Columbia, South Carolina, for Camp Sevier, near
Greenville, a broken wheel under one coach, wooden, causes it to derail at ~1000 hrs. and drops the car from a high trestle near the camp, and pulls the second coach, steel, with it. Seven soldiers are killed immediately and ten others seriously injured, three of whom are not expected to live.[88][89]
May 13 – United States – The Buffalo Special passenger train derailed at
Schodack Landing late at night. Four men killed, over 40 people injured.[90]
June 5 – United States – Due to a claimed mistake in train orders, a local passenger train collides head-on into the engine of a work train in a tunnel on the
Central Vermont Railroad, between
Burlington and
Winooski, killing five and injuring several others. Seven are removed to hospital but no passengers are killed.[91]
June 22 – United States – Hammond circus train wreck, near
Hammond, Indiana: An empty
Michigan Central Railroad troop train collides into the rear end of the stopped Hagenbeck-Wallace
circus train, resulting in 86 deaths and 127 injured. The engineer of the troop train had been taking "kidney pills" that had a narcotic effect, and he was asleep at the throttle.
June 29(?) – Romania – An express passenger train collides with a goods train between
Mircești and
Roman, killing 45.[92]
July 31 – Germany – Two trains collide between Schneidemühl and Landsberg (now
Piła and
Górowo Iławeckie, both in Poland); 30 people are killed. A crowd of
looters forms and several are arrested.[93]
August 8 – France – German ammunition train entering
Harbonnières station is shelled by advancing British
Mark V tanks. The train explodes; a following troop train on an adjacent track is stopped and captured by British troops.[94]
August 11 – United Kingdom – A fire at the
North Eastern Railway carriage sheds at
Heaton,
Northumberland destroys 34 vehicles. They are all replaced by new vehicles with identical running numbers.[95]
August – Austrian-occupied territory in Italy – Two trains taking soldiers on leave collide at Uggowitz (now
Uggovizza or Ukve) on the line between
Villach and Pemtaffl; 20 people are killed and 80 injured.[96]
September 11 – Germany – At Schneidemühl (now
Piła, Poland), a goods train collides with a children's excursion; 33 children and 2 railwaymen are killed, and 17 people injured.[96]
September 13 – Netherlands – Weesp train disaster,
Weesp, Netherlands. Heavy rainfall caused the embankment leading to the
Merwedekanaal bridge to become unstable. When a passenger train approached the bridge the track slid off the embankment, causing the carriages to crash into each other and the locomotive to hit the bridge. 41 persons were killed and 42 injured. In the aftermath of the disaster, it was decided to establish a dedicated study of
soil mechanics at the
Delft University of Technology.
September 19, 1918 – France – On the
PLM railway, three cars break away from the rear of a train; the resulting collision in the
Pacy Tunnel kills about 30 people and injures about 100.[96]
September 23 – Germany – A train from
Leipzig crashes into the back of one from
Berlin; 30 people are killed and 59 injured, 30 of them seriously.[97]
October 1 – Sweden – Getå Railroad Disaster: A
mixed train from
Malmö to
Stockholm is derailed at about 70 km/h (43 mph) when heavy rain causes an embankment to collapse, and the crashed cars burn. At least 42 people are killed and 41 injured.[97]
October 2 – United States – A burning trestle over Cox creek, two miles (3.2 km) north of Arcadia, Kansas caused the wrecking of Frisco Passenger train No. 101 at about 5 PM. Engineer A.F. McCullough and Fireman Charles Mahan remained at their posts trying to stop the train. McCullough and Mahan died but saved all others on board. The engine and coal tender collapsed the weakened bridge burying McCullough and Mahan in their cabs. The passengers escaped from their coaches before the entire train was consumed by fire.[98]
October 12 – Spain – Two passenger trains collide at Selerra after a
switch is set wrongly; 67 are killed and 25 seriously injured.[97]
November 6 – Austria-Hungary – A broken axle derails a troop train between Steinbruch (now
Kőbánya) and
Rákos [
hu], both near
Budapest, now in Hungary; 60 are killed and 180 injured.[99]
Late 1918 – Belgium – Between
Namur and
Liège, a train passes through a tunnel where Scottish soldiers, riding on the roof, are hit by scaffolding and 17 are killed.[70]
1919
January 12 – United States – Genesee County, New York. The
New York CentralSouthwestern Limited rammed the back of the Wolverine at
South Byron. A Pullman sleeping car was pushed upward and fell on top of another Pullman sleeper, killing 22 people.[100]
February 16(?) – Belgian Congo – At
Kambove, a freight wagon full of explosives explodes. There are 27 deaths, including everyone on the train.[99]
April 17 – France – At
Crissé on the
Chemins de fer de l'État, a train carrying French soldiers on leave stops due to engine trouble. Although
detonators are put down to protect it, the following train, taking American soldiers to
Brest to return home, is going too fast downhill and is unable to stop. The collision kills 33 people.[101]
June 19 – British India – At
Firozabad, the wrong
tablet is issued to goods train 127, which proceeds onto the single-track section to Makkhanpur instead of waiting for passenger train 7. The collision kills all four enginemen and fifteen passengers, and starts a fire that kills many more, perhaps 100 to 300 deaths altogether.[101]
June 29 – British India – A mail train from
Delhi collides with a freight train at
Rohtak; 35 are killed and 46 injured.[101]
August 14 – United States – near
Parkersburg, West Virginia. A
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad switching engine collided with a streetcar operated by the Parkersburg Interurban Trolley System carrying a number of women and children from
Marietta and
Reno, Ohio on a church picnic. 15 people were killed by scalding when the steam lines ruptured and twenty-three more were injured. One witness died from a
stroke after witnessing the tragedy.[103]
September 1 – United States – Hubbard Woods crossing, Chicago, Illinois. A Chicago & Northwestern passenger train strikes Mary Tanner, a pedestrian whose shoe was caught on the rail while crossing the tracks, killing her. The impact also killed her husband William Fitch Tanner and grievously injured John Miller, a railroad flagman, when they refused to give up trying to free her.[104]
October 16 – United States – Marlboro, New Jersey. On the Freehold-Atlantic Highlands branch of the
Central of New Jersey Railroad. A locomotive and a baggage car leave the track. The train struck a truck at a grade crossing 300 yards (270 m) west of the Marlboro NJ station. The train overturned with tracks torn off, the engine lay on its side. The forward cars were torn loose and were turned at right angles. It resulted in one death as the engineer, Michael Mooney, was scalded to death.[105]
October 25 – Germany – At Kranowitz (now
Krzanowice, Poland), a passenger and freight train collide and catch fire. There are 25 deaths. The site is near the German border with Austria-Hungary (now the Polish border with Czechia) and reportedly most of the victims were alcohol smugglers, who may have fed the flames by trying to dump the evidence.[101]
October 29 – United States – Near
Acton, California,
Southern Pacific train number 50, the southbound San Joaquin Flyer, derails on a downgrade curve, with the engine and tender going into a ditch followed by the baggage car and seven coaches. Four coaches, the diner, and three Pullmans remain on the rails. Five are killed, including the engineer,[106] and 143 injured. Excessive speed on the curve is said to be the cause.[107] Southern Pacific technical experts inform the coroner's jury that the train derailed as it hit the curve in excess of 45 mph (72 km/h), and the general superintendent of the S.P. shops further expressed the opinion that the engineer may have been either dead or unconscious at his post before the accident.[108]
November 1 – Denmark – Vigerslev train crash: An express train collided at speed with a stopped train due to a dispatcher error. 40 people were killed and about 60 injured.
November 1 – France – At Pont-sur-Yonne on the
PLM railway, the Simplon Express is stopped by signals, but a
Paris-
Geneva express overruns its signals and crashes into the first train's rear. The number of deaths is variously reported as 18 or 26, the injured as 42 to 60.[109]
November – Passengers remembering the September 4 and November 1 accidents in France become fearful when their train from
Juvisy to
Paris is stopped for some time. Some of them decide to get out—and stand on the other track, where four are killed by another train.[109]
December 10 – Anatolia – An Ottoman Railway train collides with another train at a junction; 35 are killed or injured.[109]
December 20 – United States – Onawa train wreck,
Maine. A
Canadian Pacific Railway passenger train running across Maine between Canadian cities collides head-on with a freight train, killing 23.
December 20 – United States –
Missouri Valley, Iowa – Twenty-four are injured, eleven seriously, two of whom are expected to die, when a
Chicago and Northwestern Railway fast mail train from Chicago encounters an open switch and strikes train number 215, from
Minneapolis, standing on a sidetrack, telescoping the rear coach. Medical attention is rushed from
Omaha, and many of the injured taken to hospitals there.[110]
December 20 – United States –
Redding, California – Passengers aboard the second section of
Southern Pacific Railroad train number 54, the through-
Portland passenger train, avoid injury when the locomotive and the first seven cars derail due to a broken rail. Four baggage cars, one tourist Pullman, the dining car, and a standard Pullman derail, with the Pullmans sliding down an embankment. The standard Pullman was unoccupied. The sole injury is suffered by the baggageman, whose thumb is crushed.[111]
December 22 – United States – Near
Topeka, Kansas. Engineer David E. Hartigan, Sr., 23 years an engineer for the Rock Island Railroad, was returning to St. Joseph, Missouri from Topeka with a trainload of Christmas shoppers, some even standing in the aisles. Every seat in the eight coaches was occupied. A freight train was accidentally sent on a collision course with the passenger train and they met near Elmont, Kansas. Hartigan stuck to his cab, applying the brake until the collision. He was scalded to death. His sacrifice possibly saved 200 persons from death or injury. Forty people were slightly injured. No one else was killed.[112][better source needed]
^"9 Dead, 65 Hurt In Triple Wreck On The New Haven"(PDF). New York Times. February 23, 1916. Retrieved 2013-12-29. Local Train Smashes Into the Connecticut River Special Near Milford, Conn. Then Sidewiped By Freight. Running Back from Stalled Express to Signal, Flagman Is Killed Before Crash. Yale Alumni Aid Injured. Priests and Nuns Also Attend the Victims. Engineer May Have Run Past Block Signal. ...
^Wire service, "TWO WOMEN PASSENGERS ARE VICTIMS", Santa Cruz Evening News, Santa Cruz, California, Friday 15 March 1918, Volume XXI, Number 111, page 1.
^Associated Press, "Trainman is Killed and Passengers Hurt by Wreck", The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Friday 10 May 1918, Volume XLVIII, Number 61, page 2.
^Wire service, "TROOP TRAIN IS WRECKED AT CAMP JACKSON, S. C. - SEVERAL SOLDIERS KILLED AND HURT - Seven Are Dead and Several of Injured Are Expected to Die - Wheel on One Car Broke and Entire Train Was Dragged Over High Trestle", Riverside Daily Press, Riverside, California, Friday 10 May 1918, Volume XXXIII, Number 112, page 1.
^International News Service, "SEVEN SOLDIERS DIE, 10 HURT IN TRAIN WRECK", Los Angeles Evening Herald, Los Angeles, California, Friday 10 May 1918, Volume XLIII, Number 163, page 1.
^"BUFFALONIANS INJURED IN WRECK OF EXPRESS OF NEW YORK CENTRAL", Buffalo Evening Times, Buffalo, New York, Tuesday evening, 14 May 1918
^Associated Press, "Five are Killed in Wreck on the Vermont Central", The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Thursday 6 June 1918, Volume XLVIII, Number 84, page 4.
^Associated Press, “Five Killed And Fifty Injured In S. P. Wreck - Engine Jumps Track Near Acton Station - Southbound Flyer Goes Into Ditch,” The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Thursday 30 October 1919, Bolume XLVI, Number 60, page 1.
^Wire service, “Board of Inquiry to Convene at Acton Wreck - Five Killed and Hundred Forty-Three Injured in S. P. Smashup,” The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Friday 31 October 1919, Volume XLVI, Number 61, page 1.
^Associated Press, “Dead Engineer Had Throttle? - Investigation of the Acton Wreck Indicates High Speed on Curve,” The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Sunday 2 November 1919, Volume XLVI, Number 63, page 1.
^United Press, “24 Injured In Wreck Of C. & N. W. Train - Mail Train From Chicago Telescopes Rear Pullman Coach of Minneapolis Train - Two Will Probably Die From Injuries,” Riverside Daily Press, Riverside, California, Saturday 20 December 1919, Volume XXXIV, Number 302, page 1.
^United Press, “A Miracle Saved Train Passengers - Southern Pacific Train Tumbles Down Embankment Near Redding - Only One Hurt - Breakfasts Scattered When the Diner Topples Over - Broken Rail Causes Wreck,” Riverside Daily Press, Riverside, California, Saturday 20 December 1919, Volume XXXIV, Number 302, page 1.
^Newspaper article/obituary titled "Engineer Hartigan met hero's death. Sticks at throttle when two trains collide near Topeka, Kansas. Veteran employee of Rock Island Railroad had been with company for 46 years' continuous service – funeral tomorrow morning." Also the December 27, 1919 St. Joseph Observer Newspaper ran a story on it.
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