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Title: Charlestown Rail Disaster, 1912 - MCH00167

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Title

Charlestown Rail Disaster, 1912 - MCH00167

Description

On the 21st of June the 2.45 from Rochdale and Liverpool approached the infamous Charlestown curve at about 40 miles per hour and left the line, killing four passengers.

Although off the rails, the train was carried for a further 100 yards "tearing up the rails as if they were wire". The engine ploughed into the embankment on the North side of the cutting.

The first carriage was ripped off its bogies, but stayed upright. The second carriage took most of the impact and was described as "smashed into matchwood". It was in this carriage that the deaths and most of the injuries occurred. The remaining carriages were all damaged with broken windows and splintered floorboards.

For further information see: http://www.hebdenbridgehistory.org.uk/charlestown/events.html

Creator

E.H. Lord, Hebden Bridge

Source

Mick Chatham

Rights

PHDA - Mick Chatham Collection

Relation

Pennine Horizons Digital Archive

Identifier

MCH00167.tif

Citation

E.H. Lord, Hebden Bridge, “Charlestown Rail Disaster, 1912 - MCH00167,” Pennine Horizons Digital Archive, accessed April 19, 2024, https://penninehorizons.org/items/show/31594.

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