- Doncaster rail crash
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Doncaster rail crash Date and time 16 March 1951 10:09 Location South of Doncaster railway station Rail line East Coast Main Line Cause Poor track maintenance Trains 1 Deaths 14 Injuries 12 List of UK rail accidents by year The Doncaster rail crash was a railway accident that took place near to Doncaster, England.
On 16 March 1951 the 10:04 Doncaster to London Kings Cross consisting of 14 coaches (and a horse box at the rear) hauled by a LNER Thompson Class A2/2 No 60501 Cock o' the North locomotive left the station. Shortly afterwards the train was negotiating a tight crossover with a speed limit of 10 mph. The driver claimed he took the crossover at around 15 mph as he had done previously but the 3rd coach derailed. The leading end of the coach followed the front of the train and went to the right of a pier supporting Balby Bridge (which carries a road junction over the line), but the rear of the coach, propelled by the weight of the following train went to the left, wrapping the coach around the pier, killing 14 passengers and seriously injuring 12 others.
Cause
Investigation of the accident concluded that poor maintenance of the crossover was the primary cause with bolts supporting the crossover assembly missing or cracked.
References
- British Railway Disasters publ. Ian Allan 1996 ISBN 0-7110-2470-7
External links
Categories:- Railway accidents in England
- Railway accidents in 1951
- 1951 in England
- Disasters in Yorkshire
- Transport in Doncaster
- Rail transport in South Yorkshire
- History of South Yorkshire
- London and North Eastern Railway
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