- Violet Town rail accident
infobox AU rail accident
title = Violet Town rail accident
date = 7 February 1969
time =
location =Violet Town, Victoria
location-dist = 173
location-dir = N
location-city =Melbourne
line =North East railway line, Victoria
operator =Victorian Railways
type = Collision
cause = Driver heart attack
trains = 2
pax =
deaths =
injuries =The Violet Town rail accident, also known as the
Southern Aurora disaster, was a railway accident that occurred on 7 February 1969 near the McDiarmids Rd crossing, approximately 1km south ofViolet Town, Victoria ,Australia .Overview
The accident involved the
head-on collision of a passenger train, the southboundSouthern Aurora , and a northbound freight train on the new single line standard gaugeSydney toMelbourne main line, opened seven years earlier. Nine people died, including Lawrence Rosevear, the driver of the northbound freight train.The trains were supposed to cross at the Violet Town crossing loop (where there are two tracks), but because the driver of the passenger train had died of an apparent heart attack approximately 5 to 6 kilometres north of the crossing loop, the train did not stop at the red signals. It continued until it collided head-on with the freight train. At the time of the accident, neither ATC nor AWS nor ATP were fitted, although a vigilance control system had been fitted to both locomotives. This required a member of the train crew to press a button every sixty to ninety seconds; either the driver or fireman/second person could press the buttons.
According to an inquest into the accident, the fireman of the Southern Aurora, M. Coulthard, had been recorded on the Hasler speed recorder as pressing the vigilance control button when the train passed through the danger signals at the crossing loop.
The crew of the northbound train saw the oncoming passenger train and had slowed their train, flicking their headlights to warn the crew of the approaching Southern Aurora. The fireman (Arnfreid Brendecke) jumped clear of the cab moments before impact; a burning car missed him by approximately one metre. The driver of the northbound train sought safety in the engine room. However, he died in a fire and explosion.
As a result of this accident, improved
vigilance control s were fitted to ensure that firemen as well as drivers remained alert, although, as the laterBeresfield rail disaster in 1996 showed, these were not foolproof.Memorial
A stone cairn has been erected at the site of the accident.
External links
* [http://www.prov.vic.gov.au/images/12800/12800-00001-000123-340.asp Public Record Office of Victoria - Southern Aurora disaster aerial view]
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