Jeannette's Creek train wreck

Jeannette's Creek train wreck
Date October 27, 1854
Time 5.00 am
Location Chatham-Kent, Ontario
Country Canada
Operator Great Western Railway
Type of incident Rear end collision
Statistics
Trains 2
Deaths 52
Injuries 48

The Baptiste Creek train wreck was a fatal railroad accident that occurred on October 27, 1854 at Baptiste Creek near present-day Jeannettes Creek in Chatham-Kent, Ontario. It was Canada's first major train wreck leaving 52 people dead[1] and indeed the worst rail disaster in North America at that time.[2]

The train involved left Niagara Falls the previous afternoon; it comprised eight cars altogether; four first-class, two second-class and two baggage cars. As was commonplace during that early time of rail travel it was subject to several delays; these were caused by dense fog, a derailed gravel-train, a burst cylinder head and a slow freight train ahead of it. By the time it left London at 1 a.m. bound for Windsor it was at least four hours late.

At Baptiste Creek a gravel train consisting of fifteen cars loaded with wet gravel was on a siding employed in repairing the track bed. Its engineer had been told by the night watchman at Baptiste Creek station that it was safe to venture onto the main line as the passenger train had already passed; at 5 a.m. as the train backed along the main railway line at between ten and twelve mph the passenger train emerged from the fog at a speed of twenty mph.

The collision was described as "absolutely dreadful", the second-class cars were described as being "smashed into bits and pieces" with "nearly every person of them killed or dreadfully injured". The people in the front of one of the first class cars suffered a similar fate.

Witnesses described several of the bodies, which included eleven women and ten children, as being "crushed out of all human shape". Some six hours later many of the bodies had still to be recovered. The second-class cars carried many German emigrants on their way to start a new life in the United States. The 48[1] (some sources 60[3]) injured were taken to Chatham where their moans and cries could be "heard throughout the town", blood literally dripping from the cars.

References

  1. 1 2 http://railwaymuseum.ab.ca/files/pdfs/Marker_2006.10.pdf THE MARKER, Official Newsletter of the Alberta Pioneer Railway Association Volume 25, Number 4, page 3, "History Tidbits"
  2. http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0002313 Disasters - The Canadian Encyclopedia
  3. Derail: Why Trains Crash by Nicholas Faith, page 44, publ 2000 by Channel 4 books, ISBN 0-7522-7165-2

Coordinates: 42°18′48″N 82°26′12″W / 42.31333°N 82.43667°W / 42.31333; -82.43667

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