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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
September 24, 2007
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Monday, September 24, 2007
The Pelhamville Train Wreck of 1885
I have written about an unusual train wreck that occurred in late 1885 in
Pelhamville. See The Pelhamville Train Wreck of 1885: "One of the
Most Novel in the Records of Railroad Disasters", 80(1) The
Westchester Historian pp. 36-43 (2004). For the next several days I
will provide transcriptions of news articles about the wreck that appeared
in local newspapers. The first, provided below, appeared on the first page
of the December 28, 1885 issue of The New York Times.
"THE PLATFORM DISPLACED
A BOSTON EXPRESS TRAIN DERAILED AT PELHAMVILLE.
LOCOMOTIVE AND MAIL CAR PLUNGE DOWN AN EMBANKMENT -- THE FIREMAN KILLED
AND SEVERAL PERSONS HURT.
The mail express train out of Boston known as the 'owl train,' due in this
city at 6:25 o'clock yesterday morning, was running at a high rate of
speed when it approached Pelhamville Station, 15 miles out from New-York,
on the New-York, New-Haven and Hartford Railroad. It was nearly 6 o'clock
and the train was a few minutes late. As it neared the station Engineer
Riley Phillips saw that the track was strewn with timbers and planks. He
had just time to shut off steam and apply the brakes when his engine
struck the loose lumber, left the rails, plowed through the ties and
frozen roadbed and finally rolled down a 60-foot embankment to the right
of the track, followed by the Southern and Western mail car. The engineer
and his fireman, Eugene Blake, were thrown out of the cab. The former
landed in a ditch at the foot of the embankment, and escaped with some
bruises and an internal injury which is not considered serious. The
fireman was crushed beneath the wreck of the locomotive, and held fast. He
was so badly hurt that he died on the ground a short time after the
accident.
In the Southern and Western mail car, which pitched end over end down the
embankment, were the head clerk, F. S. McCausland and his assistants, W.
S. Hart, C. P. Turner, E. E. Clark, J. F. McCoy, Charles Mitchell, and
Peter Conaty. Clark, Hart, and Turner were badly bruised about their
bodies. Their wounds were dressed, and they were made as comfortable as
possible. The rest of the train, which was in charge of Conductor E.
Holcombe, consisted of a mail car, of the Boston and Albany line; a
baggage car, the coach Martha, of the Mann Boudoir Car Company; two
sleeping cars, in charge of Conductor Crane; a smoking car, and two
ordinary passenger coaches. All of these cars were derailed, and the sixty
or seventy passengers were thrown out of their berths or seats and
received a severe shaking up, but no serious injuries. They were badly
frightened by the sudden stopping of the train. One of the sleeping cars
halted on the very edge of the embankment. Its heavy trucks and the
coupling attaching it to the next car kept it on the roadbed. The wheels
of the forward truck had sunk deeply into the ground.
F. S. McCausland, the chief mail clerk, said after getting out of his car,
which was badly wrecked, that this was the fourth railroad accident he had
been in, and he had been fortunate enough to escape every time with
nothing more serious than some slight bruises. When he found the car going
down the embankment he concluded the best thing to do was to brace himself
as well as possible. This he did, and when the car landed he called out to
the clerks: "Are any of you dead, boys?' To this inquiry he received
answer that they were all right excepting a bad shaking up and some
bruises received while they were alternately standing on their feet and
their heads. The car was heated by a safety stove, which was riveted to
the floor and the doors of which were locked. Not a coal escaped, and thus
the horror of a fire was spared to the men.
The passengers in the sleeping cars found themselves in darkness as they
were awakened and thrown from their berths, as all the lights had been
extinguished. One only received a slight cut from a broken pane of glass.
The men hurriedly dressed and joined Conductor Holcombe, Station Agent
Merritt, and the train hands in the work of releasing the mail agent and
rescuing the fireman from the wreck of the locomotive. Drs. Nutting and
Carlisle, of Mount Vernon, were sent for in haste and they rendered such
service as was possible to the dying man and attended to the wants of the
engineer and others who had sustained injuries.
Some time after the accident the Adams Express train came down from New
Rochelle, and took on board the passengers of the wrecked train and
brought them to this city. At 10 o'clock a wrecking train arrived from
New-Haven, and a large gang of men began the work of clearing away the
wreck. The timbers and planks, which caused the accident, were a part of
the station platform, which the high wind had torn from its place and
piled upon the track. It is said that this platform was never permanently
anchored to the ground. The planks were nailed to the timbers, which
simply rested on the tops of posts driven into the ground. The rails along
the platform were badly twisted and the ties were torn up and crushed, but
Supt. William H. Stevenson, who was on the ground at an early hour, said
that the line would be clear for trains this morning. He also said that
the accident was an unforeseen and unavoidable one, as it could not be
anticipated that the platform would be blown upon the track.
Eugene Blake, the unfortunate fireman, lived in New-Haven. He was 35 years
old, and had been married only about five months. He was conscious but a
short time after the accident, but during that time he called repeatedly
for his wife. He appeared to be in great agony, and begged that the wight
on his abdomen, which oppressed him, might be removed. His body was taken
to the residence of W. A. McGalliord, at Pelhamville, and Coroner Tice was
notified. He will hold an inquest at 11 o'clock to-day.
The news of the accident spread rapidly over the surrounding country.
Pelhamville is not a village, but simply a station for the accommodation
of passengers living along the line of the New-Haven Railroad between
Mount Vernon on the west and New-Rochelle on the east. In a very short
time people began to flock to the scene of the accident, and a crowd
remained there all day viewing the wreck and watching the gangs of men
engaged in clearing and repairing the track."
Source: The Platform Displaced, N. Y. Times, Dec. 28, 1885, p. 1.
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:47 AM
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