The Angola rail crash occurred in 1867, when the rear coaches of a
passenger train derailed and fell from a bridge at Angola , New
York. The eastern bound express train over the Lake Shore railroad,
consisted of a locomotive, four baggage, express and mail cars, an
emigrant and three first-class passenger coaches. It was timed to
pass Angola, a small way station in the extreme western part of New
York, at 1:30 P.M. without stopping; but on the day in question it
was .two hours and forty-five minutes late, and was consequently
running rapidly. A third of a mile east of the station there is a
shallow stream, known as Big Sister creek, flowing in the bottom of
a ravine the western side of which rises abruptly to the level of
the track, while on the eastern side there is a gradual ascent of
some forty or fifty rods. This ravine was spanned by a deck bridge
of 160 feet in length, at the east end of which was an abutment of
mason work some fifty feet long connecting with an embankment
beyond.
Causes
It subsequently appeared that the forward
axle in the rear truck of the rear car was slightly bent. The
defect was not perceptible to the eye, but in turning round the
space between the flanges of the wheels of that axle varied by
three-fourths of an inch. As long as the car was travelling on an
unbroken track, or as long as the wheels did not strike any break
in the track at their narrowest point, this slight bend in the axle
was of no consequence. There was a frog in the track, however, at a
distance of 600 feet east of the Angola station, and it so happened
that a wheel of the defective axle struck this frog in such a way
as to make it jump the track. The rear car was instantly derailed.
From the frog to the bridge was some 1200 feet. With the appliances
then in use the train could not be stopped in this space, and the
car was dragged along over the ties, swaying violently from side to
side just before the bridge was reached the car next to the last
was also thrown from the track, and in this way, and still moving
at considerable speed, the train went onto the bridge. It was
nearly across when the last car toppled off and fell on the north
side close to the abutment. The car next to the rear, more
fortunate, was dragged some 270 feet further, so that when it broke
loose it simply slid some thirty feet down the embankment. Though
this car was badly wrecked, but a single person in it was killed.
His death was a very singular one. Before the car
separated from
the train, its roof broke in two transversely; through the fissure
thus made this unfortunate passenger was partly flung, and it then
instantly closed upon him.
Casualties
The other car had
fallen fifty feet, and remained resting on its side against the
abutment with one end inclined sharply downward. It was mid-winter
and cold, and, as was the custom then, the car was heated by two
iron stoves, placed one at each end, in which wood was burned. It
was nearly full of passengers. Naturally they all sprang from their
seats in terror and confusion as their car left the rails, so that
when it fell from the bridge and violently struck on one of its
ends, they were precipitated in an inextricable mass upon one of
the overturned stoves, while the other fell upon them from above. A
position more horrible could hardly be imagined. Few, if any, were
probably killed outright. Some probably were suffocated; the
greatest number were undoubtedly burned to death. Of those in that
car three only escaped; forty-one are supposed to have
perished.
This was a case of derailment aggravated by fire. It is
safe to say that with the improved appliances since brought into
use, it would be most unlikely to now occur under precisely the
same circumstances on any well-equipped or carefully operated road.
Derailments, of course, by broken axles or wheels are always
possible, but the catastrophe at Angola was primarily due to the
utter inability of those on the train to stop it, or even greatly
to check its speed within any reasonable distance. Before it
finally stood still the locomotive was half a mile from the frog
and 1,500 feet from the bridge. Thus, when the rear cars were off
the track, the speed and distance they were dragged gave them a
lateral and violently swinging motion, which led to the final
result.
Fire
Though under similar circumstances now this
might not happen, there is no reason why, circumstances being
varied a little, the country should not again during any winter day
be shocked by another Angola sacrifice. Certainly, so far as the
danger from fire is concerned, it is an alarming fact that it is
hardly less in 1879 than it was in 1867. This accumulative horror
is, too, one of the distinctive features of American railroad
accidents. In other countries holocausts like those at Versailles
in 1842 and at Abergele in 1868 have from time to time taken place.
They are, however, occasioned in other ways, and, as their
occurrence is not regularly challenged by the most risky possible
of interior heating apparatus, are comparatively infrequent. The
passenger coaches used on this side of the Atlantic, with their
light wood-work heavily covered with paint and varnish, are at best
but tinder-boxes. The presence in them of stoves, hardly fastened
to the floor and filled with burning wood and coal, involves a
degree of risk which no one would believe ever could willingly be
incurred, but for the fact that it is. No invention yet appears to
have wholly met the requirements of the case. That they will be
met, and the fearful possibility which now hangs over the head of
every traveller by rail, that he may suddenly find himself doomed
without possibility of escape to be roasted alive, will be at least
greatly reduced hardly admits of question.
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