"Engine One-Forty-Three" (Roud 255) is a folk ballad in the tradition of Anglo-American train wreck songs. It is based on the true story of the wreck of the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway's Fast Flying Virginian (FFV) near Hinton, West Virginia in 1890. [1] [2]
The song's earliest documented appearance was in Railroad Man Magazine in 1913 as "The Wreck on the C. & O.", while its earliest recording was in 1924. The first use of the title "Engine One-Forty-Three" was for a recording by the Carter Family in 1929, which became one of the group's best-selling records and the basis for many subsequent recordings. [3]
The FFV, the Chesapeake & Ohio's luxury passenger train, was heading east to Washington, D.C. in the early morning of 23 October 1890 when it struck a rockslide three miles outside Hinton in Summers County, West Virginia. [4] The train's 30-year-old engineer George Alley tried to stop, but the engine overturned, and he was trapped in the wreckage. [5] Severely scalded, Alley died five hours later. His two firemen, both of whom leapt from the engine, were also scalded but survived. Remarkably, no passengers were injured. [4] [6]
Apart from the basic story, the song deviates widely from the facts associated with the accident. For example, Alley's mother did not come to his side as he was dying (she had died years earlier); Alley's hair was black, not blonde; the train's fireman had no part in causing the crash; and among other differences, the engine's number was 134, not 143. Meanwhile, there is no evidence Alley was speeding to make up lost time. [7] [8] In fact, the young engineer, whose father and four brothers all worked for the C. & O., was hailed a hero for his attempt to prevent the crash. [9]
Gene Austin, an early crooner, was the first to record the song in 1924, under the title "The C. & O. Wreck", and several other versions were recorded in the next few years under different titles. On February 15, 1929, The Carter Family recorded the song as "Engine One-Forty-Three" with A.P. Carter credited as songwriter. The Carters' release on the Victor label sold more than 88,000 copies, while their Montgomery Ward release accounted for another 5,000 in sales. [10]
Over the years, variations of the song, most based on the Carter Family version, have been recorded by dozens of artists, including the Kossoy Sisters, Dave Alvin, Joan Baez, Norman Blake, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Lester Flatt & Earl Scruggs, David Grisman, Roger Miller, Michael Nesmith, Ralph Stanley, Townes Van Zandt, and Doc Watson. [11] [12] [13]
"Engine One-Forty-Three" was the last song to be recorded by country music singer Johnny Cash. Cash recorded the song on August 21, 2003, 23 days before his death. It was released the next year on the tribute album The Unbroken Circle: The Musical Heritage of the Carter Family. [14]
Folk singer Dave Van Ronk recorded a parody of "Engine One-Forty-Three" in 1960 under the title "Georgie and the IRT". The song's lyrics, written by crime writer Lawrence Block, poked fun at New York City's subway system. [15]
The song has appeared under many titles, including "Wreck of the C. & O.", "The F.F.V.", "George Allen", and "The C. & O. Wreck". [2] Meanwhile, Carson J. Robison's "The Wreck of the C&O No. 5" recounts a much later crash on the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad, one that occurred in 1920. [16] [17] The following examples show the differences and similarities in the opening stanzas of "Engine One-Forty-Three" and its variants.
The earliest known account of the song dates to 1913, though there is evidence of earlier versions.
Along came the F.F.V., the fastest on the line,
A running on the C. and O. road, thirty minutes behind time.
As she passed the Sewalls it was quarters on the line;
And they received new orders to make up some lost time.
Chorus:
Many man's been murdered by the railroad, railroad,
Many man's been murdered by the railroad and lain in his
lonesome grave.
When she arrived at Hinton the engineer was there
His name was Georgie Alley, with bright and golden hair,
His fireman, Jackie Dickerson, was standing by his side,
Waiting to get orders, both in the cab to ride.
— Railroad Man Magazine, 1913 [18]
An undated broadside of the song remains true to the 1913 version, except the engineer's last name is Allen and the crash site is in Virginia.
Along came the F.F.V., the fastest on the line,
Running over the C. & O. Road, twenty minutes behind,
And when they got to Hinton, they quartered on the line
Awaiting for strict orders for the crew so far behind.
When they got to Hinton the engineer was there,
George Allen was the young man's name with light and curly hair,
His Faithful fireman Jack Dickerson was standing by his side,
Waiting for the local train in a cab for two to ride.
Chorus:
There's many a man been killed by the R.R.
Many a man been murdered by the train.
There's many a man killed by the R.R.
And sleeping in his lonesome grave.
— Broadside, sung by Billy Briscoe [19]
The song, as recorded by the Carter Family in 1929, was based on lyrics written down by A.P. Carter, though his source is unknown. [19] In Carter's version, the engineer is George Allen and the fireman, Jack Dixon. The F.F.V. actually had two firemen that day, Lewis Withrow and Robert Foster. [20] A third fireman, Jack Dickinson, was aboard but was not on duty. [4]
Along came the FFV, the swiftest on the line
Running o'er the C&O road just 20 minutes behind
Running into Seville headquarters on the line
Receiving their strict orders from the station just behind
Running into Hampton, the engineer was there
George Allen was his name, with curling golden hair
His fireman, Jack Dixon, was standing by his side
Awaiting for strict orders while in the cab to ride
John Luther "Casey" Jones was an American railroader who was killed when his passenger train collided with a stalled freight train in Vaughan, Mississippi.
A fireman, stoker or boilerman is a person who tends the fire for the running of a boiler, heating a building, or powering a steam engine. Much of the job is hard physical labor, such as shoveling fuel, typically coal, into the boiler's firebox. On steam locomotives, the title fireman is usually used, while on steamships and stationary steam engines, such as those driving saw mills, the title is usually stoker. The German word Heizer is equivalent and in Dutch the word stoker is mostly used too. The United States Navy referred to them as watertenders.
The Wreck of the Old 97 was an American rail disaster involving the Southern Railway mail train, officially known as the Fast Mail, while en route from Monroe, Virginia, to Spencer, North Carolina, on September 27, 1903. Travelling at an excessive speed in an attempt to maintain schedule, the train derailed at the Stillhouse Trestle near Danville, Virginia, where it careened off the side of the bridge, killing 11 on-board personnel and injuring seven others. The wreck inspired a famous railroad ballad, which was the focus of a copyright lawsuit and became seminal in the genre of country music.
The 2-6-6-6 is an articulated locomotive type with two leading wheels, two sets of six driving wheels and six trailing wheels. Only two classes of the 2-6-6-6 type were built. One was the "Allegheny" class, built by the Lima Locomotive Works. The name comes from the locomotive's first service with the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway beginning in 1941, where it was used to haul loaded coal trains over the Allegheny Mountains. The other was the "Blue Ridge" class for the Virginian Railway. These were some of the most powerful reciprocating steam locomotives ever built, at 7,500 hp, and one of the heaviest at 386 tons for the locomotive itself plus 215 tons for the loaded tender.
A train driver is a person who operates a train, railcar, or other rail transport vehicle. The driver is in charge of and is responsible for the mechanical operation of the train, train speed, and all of the train handling. Train drivers must follow certain guidelines for driving a train safely.
"The Wreck of the Virginian" is an American folk song by Blind Alfred Reed recorded on July 28, 1927. The song describes a train wreck in Ingleside, West Virginia. The lyrics, which are essentially documentary, describe how, on "a bright Spring morning on the twenty-fourth of May," 1927, the engineer, E. G. Aldrich of Roanoke, Virginia, known as "Dad," and his fireman, Frank M. O'Neill of Pax, West Virginia, running train number three, "left Roanoke en route for Huntington." Then, "at eleven fifty-two that day, they just left Ingleside," when "an east-bound freight crushed into them." and they were both killed. The song also notes that "Dad" Aldritch had been an engineer on the line since 1906.
The Buffalo, Rochester, and Pittsburgh Railway was one of the more than ten thousand railroad companies founded in North America. It lasted much longer than most, serving communities from the shore of Lake Ontario to the center of western Pennsylvania.
The Fast Flying Virginian (FFV) was a named passenger train of the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway.
The Guyandotte River train wreck occurred on the morning of January 1, 1913, when the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway's (C&O) train No. 99, scheduled to run from Hinton, West Virginia, to Russell, Kentucky, and headed by Mikado locomotive 820, fell through a bridge over the Guyandotte River near Huntington, West Virginia while attempting to cross it. The accident killed seven people.
The Camp Creek train wreck was a railroad disaster that took place on 23 June 1900 just outside McDonough, Georgia. The northbound Southern Railway train hit a washout 1.5 miles north of the town, plunging 60 feet into the swollen creek below before bursting into flames, killing 35 of the 45 aboard the train.
On April 14, 1907, northbound freight train No.23 of the New York Central and Hudson River Railroad, operating on the Rome and Richland branch of the former Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg Railroad crashed when the bank on the lower side of the track failed and a section slid down the hill undermining the track. The accident occurred approximately 2.5 miles south of Blossvale, a hamlet in the Oneida County, New York, town of Annsville. The sixty-car freight train, carrying coal and other freight was pulled by engines No. 1726 and 1863. Both engines plunged down the sixty foot embankment. The lead engine came to rest in an inverted position while the second engine was on its side. Both engines and several cars were destroyed by fire. In addition to the two engines, a total of fifteen cars derailed.
American Epic: The Best of The Carter Family is a compilation of Carter Family songs recorded between 1927 and 1933 and released in 2017 to accompany the award-winning American Epic documentary film series. The album was released as a 15-track download and a vinyl LP.
In 1890 a railway accident in Quincy, Massachusetts killed 23 people. It was the second major train wreck in the city, following the 1878 accident in Wollaston. The accident was caused by a jack that had been left on the track. The foreman of the crew that placed the jack on the track was charged with manslaughter, but the trial ended in a hung jury.
Illinois Central No. 382, also known as "Ole' 382" or "The Cannonball", was a 4-6-0 "Ten Wheeler" bought new from the Rogers Locomotive Works in Paterson, New Jersey for the Illinois Central Railroad. Constructed in 1898, the locomotive was used for fast passenger service between Chicago, Illinois and New Orleans, Louisiana. On the night of April 30, 1900, engineer Casey Jones and fireman Simeon "Sim" Webb were traveling with the engine from Memphis, Tennessee to Canton, Mississippi. The train collided into the rear of a freight train stuck on the mainline, killing Jones, and injuries dozens more in Vaughan, Mississippi, the last station before Canton. After the accident, the locomotive was rebuilt in Water Valley, Mississippi, and returned to service. The locomotive was believed to be cursed after Jones' death as it would suffer three more accidents in its career before being retired in July 1935, and scrapped.
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link)