Barberton rail crash | |
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Details | |
Date | March 30, 1902 |
Location | near Barberton, South Africa |
Coordinates | 25°43′24″S31°03′08″E / 25.723333°S 31.052222°E |
Country | South Africa |
Incident type | Derailment |
Cause | Excessive speed |
Statistics | |
Trains | 1 |
Vehicles | 7 |
Deaths | 44 |
Injured | 39 |
List of rail accidents (1900-1909) |
The Barberton rail crash was a train derailment that occurred near Barberton, South Africa in 1902.
At the time of the incident, the Second Boer War was near the end of the conflict (with the war itself ending around two months after the accident [1] ). The 2nd Hampshire Regiment was ordered to move from their post in Barberton, to Johannesburg on March 24th, 1902. The train consisted of seven cars; while mostly being used to transport the military regiment, it was also being used for civilian transport. [2]
On 8:00 a.m. March 30, 1902, Easter Sunday, the train had departed from a station in Barberton. The train had left without delay, but soon gained excess speed while traveling down an incline. By the time the train had sped to 80 mph (148 kph), it began to lose control. The cars began to violently shake causing many of the occupants to lose their footing. Knowing a crash was imminent, the soldiers were ordered to lay down on the floor. One of the soldiers who disobeyed orders leapt from the train instead and perished. [3]
The train reached a curve at the bottom of the incline that proved to be too much for it to handle. Every vehicle of the train derailed. The train continued to slide down a gully, but this resulted in the boiler of the train exploding. The cars of the train shattered and splintered. One of the cars, a 'boy' truck, landed on its side and had its door sealed shut as a result of the impact. Survivors would describe the scene as quiet as if they were anticipating death, but also silent in anticipation of further military orders. [4] [3]
44 passengers died as a result of the accident and approximately 40 others were injured. [2]
The 44 who were killed in the accident were buried the day after the crash in Barberton Cemetery. They were given full military honors. A memorial was erected in the cemetery with a wall listing the names of all of those who perished in the disaster. [2] [3]
The Amagasaki derailment occurred in Amagasaki, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan, on 25 April 2005 at 09:19 local time, just after the local rush hour. It occurred when a seven-car commuter train came off the tracks on West Japan Railway Company's Fukuchiyama Line in just before Amagasaki on its way for Dōshisha-mae via the JR Tōzai Line and the Gakkentoshi Line, and the front two cars rammed into an apartment building. The first car slid into the first-floor parking garage and as a result took days to remove, while the second slammed into the corner of the building, being crushed into an L-shape against it by the weight of the remaining cars. Of the roughly 700 passengers on board at the time of the crash, 106 passengers, in addition to the driver, were killed and 562 others injured. Most survivors and witnesses claimed that the train appeared to have been travelling too fast. The incident was Japan's most serious since the 1963 Tsurumi rail accident.
The Valigonda rail disaster occurred on 29 October 2005 near the town of Valigonda, south of Hyderabad in the Indian state of Telangana(formerly a part of United Andhra Pradesh). A flash flood swept away a small rail bridge, and a "Delta Fast Passenger" train traveling on it derailed at the broken section of the line, killing at least 114 people and injuring over 200.
The railways of New South Wales, Australia have had many incidents and accidents since their formation in 1831. There are close to 1000 names associated with rail-related deaths in NSW on the walls of the Australian Railway Monument in Werris Creek. Those killed were all employees of various NSW railways. The details below include deaths of employees and the general public.
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The Stonehaven derailment was a fatal railway accident that occurred at 09:38 BST on 12 August 2020, when a passenger train returning to Aberdeen hit a landslip, near Carmont, west of Stonehaven in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, following severe rain. Of the nine people aboard, three were killed, and six were injured.