Soham rail disaster

Soham rail disaster
Details
Date2 June 1944
LocationSoham, Cambridgeshire
CountryEngland
LineEly and Newmarket Railway
CauseAmmunition Explosion
Statistics
Trains1
Deaths2
List of UK rail accidents by year
The memorial to the victims of the 1944 rail disaster

The Soham rail disaster occurred on 2 June 1944, during the Second World War, when a fire developed on the leading wagon of a heavy ammunition train. The wagon contained a quantity of high explosive bombs. The train crew had detached the wagon from the rest of the train and were drawing it away when the cargo exploded. The fireman of the train and the signalman at Soham signalbox were killed and several other people injured. The driver, Benjamin Gimbert, and fireman, James Nightall, were both awarded the George Cross for preventing further damage which would have occurred if the rest of the train had exploded.