- Esholt Junction rail crash
The Esholt Junction rail crash occurred on Thursday
9 June 1892 , at the point at which theWharfedale Line fromIlkley divides, one branch in the direction ofLeeds and the otherBradford , a short distance afterGuiseley railway station . Two trains collided at around three thirty in the afternoon, resulting in the deaths of five passengers, and injuries to twenty-six more. The driver and fireman of one of the trains were injured, as was a guard on the other train. Although vegetation obscuring a signal was accepted as the primary cause of the crash, a recommendation was made to alter certain signaling procedures at the junction to prevent a recurrence. ["The Railways of Wharfedale", Peter E. Baughan (1969) David & Charles (Publishers) Ltd]The crash arose as three trains neared the junction at much the same time - a common enough occurrence. From the direction of Bradford, a Bradford-Harrogate train was following a route taking it in the direction of
Guiseley ; from the Leeds branch, a Leeds-Ilkley train was also heading towards Guiseley; whilst in the other direction an Ilkley-Bradford train approached the junction from Guiseley.Signalmen Harry L'Anson, in the Esholt signal box, gave the Bradford-Harrogate train permission to pass the junction; meanwhile in the Apperley signal box, signalman Aubrey, knowing the Ilkley-Bradford train was approaching, gave the Leeds-Ilkley train permission to proceed towards the junction under a procedure called clause 16, which allowed trains to near the junction under the proviso that they were likely to encounter a danger signal before the junction proper.
At the junction, the Leeds-Ilkley driver, Archibald McLay, despite acknowledging that he had been given a clause 16 permission, and in spite of his four and a half year's service on the line, mistook the proceed signal given to the Bradford-Harrogate train as relating to his line. In fact, his signal was at danger, but obscured by vegetation at the time he looked at it. By the time his train arrived at the junction, it was being crossed by the Ilkley-Bradford train. The Ilkley-bound train ploughed through the last six carriages of the Bradford bound train, overturning the last of these; the engine and tender of the Ilkley bound train also turned over, to the right. Five passengers in the Ilkley-Bradford train were killed, one instantly, one en route to and three in hospital. Twenty-six passengers and the guard in the Ilkley-bound train were injured. McLay and his fireman, Walter Bolton, received serious injuries.
An investigation by Major General C. S. Hutchinson concluded that whereas the immediate cause was the obscured signal, signaling practice at Esholt Junction - specifically clause 16, which allowed trains to approach the junction simultaneously - should be abolished and considered to be a breach of the
Regulation of Railways Act 1889 . The Bradford junction signal was also repositioned so that it could not be seen from the Leeds line.References
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