Clayton Tunnel rail crash

Clayton Tunnel rail crash
The tunnel's north entrance
Details
Date25 August 1861
~08:45
LocationClayton, West Sussex
Coordinates50°54′46″N 0°09′14″W / 50.91278°N 0.15389°W / 50.91278; -0.15389
CountryEngland
LineBrighton Main Line
OperatorLondon Brighton and South Coast Railway
CauseSignaller's error
Statistics
Trains2
Passengers589
Deaths23
Injured176
List of UK rail accidents by year

The Clayton Tunnel rail crash occurred on Sunday 25 August 1861, five miles (8 km) from Brighton on the south coast of England. At the time it was the worst accident on the British railway system. A train ran into the back of another inside the tunnel, killing 23 and injuring 176 passengers.

Three north-bound trains left Brighton station within a few minutes of one another. At the southern entrance to Clayton Tunnel an automatic signal failed to return to danger after the first train passed, allowing the second train to follow it into the tunnel. The signaller at the south end of the tunnel belatedly waved a red flag in an attempt to stop the second train, but thought that it had not been seen. However the driver of the second train had briefly glimpsed the flag and stopped his train inside the tunnel. The signaller then misinterpreted a 'line clear' telegraph message from the signal box at the north end of the tunnel as referring to the second train instead of the first, and signalled the third train into the tunnel.[1]

  1. ^ Great Britain Parliament, House of Commons (1862). "Railways; Turnpike Trusts; Miscellaneous: Accounts and Papers". Parliamentary Papers, Session 6 February – 7 August 1862. LIII. HMSO: 1793–1802.