The Dugald rail accident was a head-on collision between two Canadian National passenger trains on September 1, 1947, in Dugald, Manitoba, Canada, resulting in the deaths of 31 people.[1]
Dugald Rail Disaster | |
---|---|
Details | |
Date | September 1, 1947 9:44 p.m. |
Location | Dugald, Manitoba |
Country | Canada |
Line | Transcontinental mainline |
Operator | Canadian National Railways |
Incident type | Head-on collision |
Cause | Disregard of train orders |
Statistics | |
Trains | 2 |
Deaths | 31 |
Injured | 85 |
Background
editA westbound Canadian National Railways (CN) train, The Minaki Campers’ Special operating as Passenger Extra 6001 West, was a seasonal excursion service carrying vacationers from the Minaki region of Northwestern Ontario on the Monday evening of the Labour Day holiday weekend. It had been given orders at Malachi, Ontario, 100 miles (160 km) east of Winnipeg, to meet train No. 4, the eastbound Continental Limited at Vivian.[2] These orders were later changed, so that the meeting point was relocated 16 miles (26 km) westward for a meet at Dugald, 14 miles (23 km) east of Winnipeg. These second orders had been received at Elma, Manitoba.[2] The eastbound train was led by a CN U-1-d-class 4-8-2 steam locomotive numbered 6046.
Collision and fire
editBy the train order operation rules then in use, Extra 6001 would use the siding at the east switch of Dugald. The conductor of the train reminded the engineer of the Dugald stop one or two miles beforehand, by the air signal line, and received the proper acknowledgement.[2] However, Extra 6001 failed to enter the siding at the east switch, and collided head-on with the stationary eastbound train No. 4 at 9:44 p.m.[3] at approximately 30 miles per hour (48 km/h).[2]
Extra 6001 was composed of U-1-a class 4-8-2 steam locomotive 6001, two steel baggage cars, nine wooden gas-illuminated coaches, and two steel parlour cars. After the collision, the wooden carriages of the vacation train caught fire. Strict rationing of steel during World War II had resulted in old wooden cars being kept in service until newer cars could be purchased. The collision began a series of events that caused fires fuelled by compressed gas from broken lines and tanks on the wood coaches that gutted the wooden cars and set fire to oil tanks near the tracks. With the exception of the engineer and fireman of Extra 6001, who died in the initial collision, the fatalities of this incident were caused by the fire.[4] No fatalities occurred in the vacation train's two rear cars or on the Continental Limited. Both of the locomotives involved were rebuilt and repaired by CN after the wreck.
Inquiry
editAn inquiry blamed the crew of the vacationers' train for failing to obey orders. The inquiry also determined that the crew's error had been precipitated by their seeing a "clear" signal, which implied that the track ahead was clear, and that the Continental Limited's dimming of its headlamp while waiting in the station lessened its visibility to the oncoming vacation train. This resulted in both the acquisition of modern rail cars and the improvement of rules regarding operations on the line.
In popular culture
edit- "The Minaki Train Crash " - episode about the Dugald rail accident from the documentary Disasters of the Century (2000), aired on Canadian network History.
See also
editReferences
editNotes
edit- ^ LeTourneau, Rodger, "Death Takes No Holiday: Labor Day Disaster Claims 31 Lives," in the National Railway Bulletin, Volume 55, Number 6 (1990), at 12-23. This detailed article contains black and white photos, track maps, and a timetable.
- ^ a b c d Shaw (1978) p. 140
- ^ "The Dugald Train Disaster, 1947". Manitoba Historical Society. Retrieved 2009-06-25.
- ^ "Minaki train crash". Winnipeg Free Press. September 1, 1947. p. 1.
Bibliography
edit- Shaw, Robert B. (1978). A History of Railroad Accidents, Safety Precautions and Operating practices. p. 140.