Knowle and Dorridge rail crash

Knowle and Dorridge rail crash
Date 15 August 1963
Time 13:50
Location Knowle and Dorridge station, West Midlands
Country England
Rail line Birmingham to Oxford
Cause Signalling error
Statistics
Trains 2
Deaths 3
List of UK rail accidents by year
Leading end of diesel locomotive after withdrawal of carflat
Loaded carflat, the leading vehicle of the shunting movement

The Knowle and Dorridge rail crash was a fatal rail crash that occurred at Dorridge railway station in the West Midlands, England, on 15 August 1963. Three people died in the crash after a signalman's error routed a small freight train into the path of an express passenger train which slowed but could not stop before colliding with it.

The express was a Birmingham Pullman service travelling from Birmingham Snow Hill to London Paddington, having departed at 1pm. The freight train movement in Dorridge station (formerly called Knowle and Dorridge) was a routine shunting manoeuvre, one that often occurred both before or after the express train had passed through the station.

The Pullman was 9 coaches long, and was hauled by an 11-month-old diesel hydraulic Class 52 "Western" locomotive, No. 1040 Western Queen. The freight train was formed (from the London end) of a 20-ton hopper wagon, a pannier tank steam locomotive, a 20-ton brake van, an empty bogie flatcar, and a bogie flatcar loaded with Land Rover vehicles.

The crash occurred in fine dry weather, at around 1.10 pm. The express was travelling at its normal speed of around 80 mph approaching the station when the driver noticed the Knowle and Dorridge distant signal set to caution, but was only able on braking to reduce its speed to 20 mph, before colliding with the freight train which was stationary on the same line, having stopped when the signalman showed the driver a red flag. The distant signal was only 902 yards from Knowle's up main home signal, insufficient distance for the express to stop from 80 mph. The locomotive struck the loaded flat car crushing the cab, but without derailing. Two freight cars were derailed, with the rest pushed 64 yards down the track.

All four men on the freight train, the driver, fireman, shunter and guard, managed to jump clear before the collision. The driver, co-driver and second man on the express locomotive all died.

It was found that the signalman at Knowle and Dorridge signal box in the station had forgotten he had signalled the line was clear for the express train when allowing the freight train onto the line in the path of the express. On receiving a train approaching signal notifying him of the approaching the express, he realised his mistake, but he was only able to alert the freight train by red flag and although it braked to a halt, it could not be cleared from the up main line in time to avoid the collision.

As a contributory factor to the crash, it was found that the signalman, in clearing the express, had disregarded a standing regulation known as Regulation 4A, governing the safe operation of signals in areas where the minimum stopping distance for trains was shorter than the distance between signals. He had requested line clear for the express train from the preceding signal box before receiving the required clearance from the following signal box.

Had he sent the "blocking back inside home signal" message to Bentley Heath, the preceding signal box, the express train would have been slowed in plenty of time by the Bentley Heath distant signal at caution. It was not determined however, at the enquiry, whether the signalman had cleared the express before or after allowing the conflicting freight movement, meaning that this may have been moot if the express had been cleared before the freight train was permitted to foul the up main line, even if regulation 4A had been obeyed.

The express train was normally formed by a Blue Pullman multiple unit, an experimental type of new luxury train built for pullman services, but this regular train had to be taken out of service and replaced by the stand-by diesel hydraulic.

One of the drivers killed in the accident was Ernie Morris, one of the first drivers to be certified on the Blue Pullman sets, and who had featured in the 1962 British Transport Film "Lets Go To Birmingham" which was a driver's eye view of the Blue Pullman sets on a run from London Paddington to Birmingham Snow Hill.

Two drivers were required on this working and the other driver killed was Sid Bench.

The second man, also killed, was David Corkery who was only on the train to cover for the rostered man who had gone sick. David left a widow and two young children.

See also

References

Coordinates: 52°22′15″N 1°45′04″W / 52.3707°N 1.7511°W / 52.3707; -1.7511

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