Quintinshill rail disaster

Quintinshill rail disaster
A burning carriage in the aftermath of the collisions
Details
Date22 May 1915; 109 years ago (1915-05-22)
6:49 am
LocationQuintinshill, Dumfriesshire, Scotland
Coordinates55°00′53″N 3°03′54″W / 55.0146°N 3.0649°W / 55.0146; -3.0649
CountryScotland
LineCaledonian Main Line part of the West Coast Main Line
OperatorCaledonian Railway
Incident typeDouble collision, fire
CauseSignalling error
Statistics
Trains5
Deaths226
Injured246
List of UK rail accidents by year

The Quintinshill rail disaster was a multi-train rail crash which occurred on 22 May 1915 outside the Quintinshill signal box near Gretna Green in Dumfriesshire, Scotland. It resulted in the deaths of over 200 people and remains the worst rail disaster in British history.[1]

The Quintinshill signal box controlled two passing loops, one on each side of the double-track Caledonian Main Line linking Glasgow and Carlisle (part of the West Coast Main Line). At the time of the accident, both passing loops were occupied with goods trains, and a northbound local passenger train was standing on the southbound main line.

The first collision occurred when a southbound troop train travelling from Larbert to Liverpool collided with the stationary local train.[2] A minute later the wreckage was struck by a northbound sleeping car express train travelling from London Euston to Glasgow Central. Gas from the Pintsch gas lighting system of the old wooden carriages of the troop train ignited, starting a fire which soon engulfed all five trains.

Only half the soldiers on the troop train survived.[3] Those killed were mainly Territorial soldiers from the 1/7th (Leith) Battalion, the Royal Scots heading for Gallipoli. The precise death toll was never established with confidence as some bodies were never recovered, having been wholly consumed by the fire, and the roll list of the regiment was also destroyed in the fire.[4] The official death toll was 227 (215 soldiers, nine other passengers and three railway employees), but the Army later reduced their 215 figure by one. Not counted in the 227 were four victims thought to be children,[4] but whose remains were never claimed or identified. The soldiers were buried together in a mass grave in Edinburgh's Rosebank Cemetery, where an annual remembrance is held.

An official inquiry, completed on 17 June 1915 for the Board of Trade, found the cause of the collision to be neglect of the rules by two signalmen. With the northbound loop occupied, the northbound local train had been reversed onto the southbound line to allow passage of two late-running northbound sleepers. Its presence was then overlooked, and the southbound troop train was cleared for passage. As a result, both signalmen were charged with manslaughter in England, then convicted of culpable homicide after a trial in Scotland; the two terms are broadly equivalent. After they were released from a Scottish jail in 1916, they were re-employed by the railway company, although not as signalmen.

  1. ^ "BBC On this day 8 October 1952". BBC. 2008. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  2. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 208.
  3. ^ Adrian Searle. "The Quintinshill Rail Disaster: Tragedy on the Home Front". BBC. Retrieved 8 September 2015.
  4. ^ a b Druitt 1915, p. 26.