List of American railroad accidents
Appearance
This is a list of the most serious U.S. rail-related accidents (excluding intentional acts such as the 1939 City of San Francisco derailment).
19th century
[edit]1830s
[edit]- 1833 Hightstown rail accident, Hightstown, New Jersey; two killed plus 15 injured. Earliest recorded train accident involving the death of passengers.[1][2]
- 1837 Suffolk head-on collision, Suffolk, Virginia; 3 killed plus dozens injured. Later in the year, a second accident resulted in ten injuries, with two of them ultimately dying.[3]
1850s
[edit]- 1853 Greater Grand Crossing rail collision, Grand Crossing (now Chicago), Illinois; 18 killed plus 40 injured. Eventually led to massive triple level grade separation project on Chicago's South Side[4]
- 1853 Norwalk rail accident, Norwalk, Connecticut; 48 killed plus 30 injured. First movable bridge disaster in U.S. history and Connecticut's deadliest rail disaster to date[5]
- 1853 Providence and Worcester head-on collision, Valley Falls, Rhode Island; 14 killed plus 17 injured. Rhode Island's deadliest rail disaster is also the first known to be photographed[6]
- 1855 Gasconade Bridge train disaster, Gasconade, Missouri; 35+ killed plus hundreds injured. First deadly rail bridge collapse in U.S. history[7][8]
- 1856 Great Train Wreck of 1856, Whitemarsh Township, Pennsylvania; 60+ killed plus 100+ injured. Encouraged busier railroads in the Eastern U.S. to double track lines; also led to mandatory use of telegraph in cases of delays[9]
- 1859 South Bend train wreck, Mishawaka/South Bend, Indiana; 42 killed plus 50 injured[10][11]
1860s
[edit]- 1863 Chunky Creek Train Wreck, Hickory, Mississippi; ~75 killed plus ~25 injured. All but one of the dead were Confederate reinforcements headed for Vicksburg, with the disaster--Mississippi's deadliest rail disaster to date--further hindering the city's defenses against Union forces[12]
- 1864 Shohola train wreck, Shohola Township, Pennsylvania; ~65 killed plus many more injured. One of the trains was carrying Confederate POWs and Union guards, and citizens of Shohola and nearby Barryville, New York, treated the wounded 'without regard to the colour of their uniforms'[13]
- 1867 Angola Horror, Angola, New York; 49 killed. Led to the standardization of track gauges in the U.S., as well as advancements in coach brake and heating systems. Deadliest train wreck in New York outside New York City.[14]
1870s
[edit]- 1871 Wappinger Creek trestle disaster, New Hamburg, New York; 22 confirmed killed plus scores unaccounted for. May have a higher number of missing victims than any other U.S. rail disaster to date[15][16][17]
- 1871 Great Revere train wreck, Revere, Massachusetts; ~30 killed. Victims' and families' crippling lawsuits against the company at fault—the Eastern Railroad—led to its forced merger with arch rival, the Boston & Maine[18]
- 1876 Ashtabula River Railroad Disaster, Ashtabula/Edgewood, Ohio; 92 killed plus 64 injured. The deadliest U.S. rail disaster of the 19th century--also Ohio's deadliest to date--led to changes in bridge construction code, the replacement of coal and wood stoves with steam heat in coaches, and mandatory federal investigation of all U.S. rail disasters[19]
- 1877 Pickering Valley wreck, Kimberton, Pennsylvania; 7 killed plus dozens injured. Led Pennsylvania's Supreme Court to formulate a rule that when a railroad accepts money from passengers, an implied contract of care upon the part of the company arises; thus negligence is presumed on the part of the railroad if a passenger is injured[20]
- 1878 Tariffville train crash, Tariffville, Connecticut; 13 killed plus 70+ injured. Death toll might have been worse if not for what was possibly the first emergency phone call in history[21]
- 1878 Wollaston disaster, Quincy, Massachusetts; 19 killed and 170 injured[22]
1880s
[edit]- 1882 Spuyten Duyvil train wreck, Bronx, New York; eight killed and 19 injured. The dead included state senator Webster Wagner, crushed between two sleeper cars built by his company.[23]
- 1883 Tehachapi train wreck, Tehachapi, California; 15 killed plus 12 injured. Fatalities included a former congressman and the wife of a former governor, who himself was injured[24]
- 1886 Deerfield railway accident, Deerfield, Massachusetts; 11 killed and 36 injured.[25]
- 1886 Silver Creek train wreck, Silver Creek, New York; ~15 killed plus ~15 injured[26]
- 1887 West Hartford Bridge Disaster, Hartford, Vermont, 37 killed plus 50 injured. Vermont's deadliest rail disaster[27]
- 1887 Forest Hills disaster, Boston, Massachusetts; 38 killed plus 40 injured. Possibly the first known U.S. rail disaster to result from fraud[28]
- 1887 Great Chatsworth Train Wreck, Chatsworth Township, Illinois; ~85 killed plus hundreds injured. Illinois's deadliest rail disaster to date widely encouraged the use of newer steel coaches over conventional wooden ones[29]
- 1887 Chicago and Atlantic Railway Wreck, Kouts, Indiana; 10 killed[30]
- 1888 Wreck at the Fat Nancy, Orange County, Virginia; nine killed plus 26 injured. One of the dead was a civil engineer who designed a proposed culvert to replace the unstable trestle that collapsed[31]
- 1888 Mud Run disaster, Kidder Township, Pennsylvania; 64 killed plus 50 injured. Devastated a generation of the local Irish-American communities[32]
1890s
[edit]- 1890 Quincy train wreck, Quincy, Massachusetts; 23 killed plus 29 injured[33]
- 1891 Great Kipton Train Wreck, Kipton, Ohio; 9 killed. Led to the adoption of stringent quality-control standards for railroad chronometers[34][35]
- 1891 Bostian's Bridge train disaster, Statesville, North Carolina; 25-30 killed plus 25-30 injured. Several incidents of individuals reportedly hearing wails and moans at this location on the anniversary of the disaster have made Bostian's Bridge popular with paranormal activists[36]
- 1891 Great East Thompson Train Wreck, East Thompson, Connecticut; 2 killed plus hundreds injured. First of only two U.S. rail disasters to involve four different trains[37][38]
- 1893 Chester train wreck, Chester, Massachusetts; At least 14 killed[39]
- 1893 Battle Creek train wreck, Battle Creek, Michigan; 26 killed[40]
- 1896 Atlantic City rail crash, Atlantic City, New Jersey; 50 killed plus ~60 injured[41]
- 1897 Garrison train crash, Garrison, New York; 19 killed. Encouraged increases in track inspections[42]
20th century
[edit]1900s
[edit]- 1900 Casey Jones's final run, Vaughan, Mississippi; 1 killed (Jones); everyone else escaped with varying degrees of injury. Inspired several different ballads about the incident[43][44]
- 1900 Camp Creek train wreck, McDonough, Georgia; 39 killed. Bodies of many dead were brought to McDonough Town Square for identification; local folklore claims this has resulted in it being haunted ever since[45]
- 1900 Tacoma streetcar disaster, Tacoma, Washington; 43 killed plus 65 injured[46]
- 1901 Buffalo Bill Show train wreck, Lexington, North Carolina; no human deaths but well over 100 show animals killed. This likely led to the demise of "Buffalo Bill" Cody's Wild West Show Tours.[47]
- 1902 Park Avenue Tunnel (railroad) collision, New York City; 15 killed plus 30+ injured. Led to the construction of the current Grand Central Terminal and electrification of all rail lines in New York City[48][49][50]
- 1902 Mountain Lake (New York) railroad wreck, Gloversville, New York; 14 killed. The little electric railroad known for its scenic tourism never recovered and was eventually removed altogether[51][52]
- 1903 Esmond Train Wreck, Esmond, Arizona; 14 killed. Remains Arizona's deadliest rail disaster to date[53]
- 1903 Wreck of the Old 97, Danville, Virginia; 11 killed. What is possibly Virginia's deadliest rail disaster to date inspired the famous ballad of the same name sung by many famous musicians[54][55]
- 1903 Purdue Wreck, Indianapolis, Indiana; 17 killed. Devastated Purdue University's Football team for the year, who are honored before every game to this day.[56][57]
- 1903 Connellsville train wreck, Connellsville, Pennsylvania; 64 killed plus 68 injured[58]
- 1904 Jackson rail disaster, Jackson, Utah; 30+ killed. Most of town was leveled altogether[59]
- 1904 Eden train wreck, Pueblo, Colorado; 88 confirmed killed plus scores missing. Colorado's deadliest rail disaster to date[60][61]
- 1904 New Market train wreck, New Market, Tennessee; 60+ killed plus 100+ injured[62][63]
- 1905 Ninth Avenue derailment, New York City; 13 killed plus 48 injured. Deadliest accident on New York's elevated railways[64]
- 1905 Baker Bridge train wreck, Lincoln, Massachusetts; 17 killed plus 33 injured. Led RR commission to encourage railroads and street railways where trains or cars followed each other in quick succession to implement a signalling block system[65]
- 1906 Cimarron River bridge disaster, Dover, Oklahoma; 4 confirmed fatalities plus scores unaccounted for[66]
- 1906 Atlantic City train wreck, Atlantic City, New Jersey; 53 killed. Resulted in what is likely the first known press release by a private entity[67]
- 1906 Woodville Train Wreck, Porter County, Indiana; at least 48 confirmed killed plus many missing and at least 81 confirmed injured[68]
- 1906 Washington, D.C., train wreck; 53 killed plus 70 injured. Led to a complete U.S. ban on wooden coach construction; the accident is notoriously described in Frank Kuntz's book Undergraduate Days 1904-1908[69]
- 1907 Southern Pacific Sunset Express derailment, Colton, California; 24 killed[70]
- 1907 Pere Marquette Railway wreck, Salem, Michigan; 31 killed plus 101 injured. Michigan's deadliest rail disaster[71]
- 1907 Boston & Maine collision, Canaan, New Hampshire; 25 killed plus 25 injured. New Hampshire's deadliest rail disaster to date[72]
- 1908 Metz Fire and derailment, Metz Township, Michigan; 26 killed[73][74]
- 1909 The Chicago Lake Shore and South Bend Railway wreck, Porter County, Indiana; 12-14 killed plus ~40 injured[75]
- 1909 Southern Railway derailment, Reedy Fork threstle, North Carolina; 14 killed plus 25 injured[76]
1910s
[edit]- 1910 FW&WV (Indiana Railroad) collision, Kingsland, Indiana; 35-40 killed. Worst interurban Trolley disaster in U.S history[77][78]
- 1910 Wellington avalanche, Wellington, Washington; 96 killed. The worst avalanche in U.S. history destroyed two trains and a rail depot[79][80]
- 1910 Green Mountain train wreck, Green Mountain, Iowa; 52 killed plus scores injured. Remains the state of Iowa's deadliest rail disaster to date[81][82]
- 1910 Grand Trunk collision, Durand, Michigan; 18+ killed[83]
- 1911 Indianola train wreck, McCook, Nebraska; 18 killed plus 32 injured. Nebraska's deadliest rail disaster to date[84][85]
- 1911 Federal Express (train) wreck, Bridgeport, Connecticut; 14 killed. Train was transporting the St. Louis Cardinals baseball team[86][87]
- 1912 Corning train wreck, Corning (Gibson), New York; 39 killed plus 88 injured. Strongly encouraged use of automatic block signaling and led to mandatory use of steel coaches for high speed passenger rail service[88]
- 1912 Ligonier Valley Railroad Wilpen disaster, Wilpen Fairgrounds, Pennsylvania; 26 killed plus 29 injured[89][90]
- 1913 Bar Harbor Express-White Mountain Express collision, New Haven, Connecticut; 21 killed[91]
- 1914 Missouri and North Arkansas Railroad/Kansas City Southern Railway collision, Tipton Ford, Missouri; 43 killed plus 38 injured. Possibly Missouri's deadliest rail disaster to date[92][93]
- 1916 Summer Street Bridge disaster, Boston, Massachusetts; 46 killed. Deadliest disaster in Boston's history up to that point and still remains the city's deadliest transport-oriented disaster.
- 1917 Frisco collision, Kellyville, Oklahoma; 23 killed along with many cattle plus 80 injured. Remains the state of Oklahoma's deadliest rail disaster to date[94]
- 1917 Shepherdsville train wreck, Shepherdsville, Kentucky; ~50 killed. Remains the state of Kentucky's deadliest rail disaster to date[95][96]
- 1918 Hammond Circus Train Wreck, Gary/Hammond, Indiana; 86 killed plus 127 injured. Remains Indiana's deadliest rail disaster to date[97]
- 1918 Great train wreck of 1918, Nashville, Tennessee; 101 killed plus 171 injured. Officially the deadliest U.S. rail disaster to date[98][99]
- 1918 Malbone Street Wreck, New York City; 95-100 killed plus 100+ injured. Remains the deadliest rail disaster in the History of New York state and the New York City Subway[100][101]
- 1919 New York Central collision, Byron, New York; 22 killed[102][103]
- 1919 Onawa train wreck, Onawa, Maine; 23 killed plus 50 injured. Maine's deadliest rail disaster to date[104]
1920s
[edit]- 1920 Globeville, Colorado Labor Day Denver & Interurban disaster. Twelve dead, 200+ injured, which included many Louisville baseball fans.[105][106][107]
- 1921 Porter Train Wreck, Porter, Indiana; 37 killed plus 100+ injured. Eventually led to the requirement of cab signaling in the U.S.[108]
- 1921 Bryn Athyn Train Wreck, Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania; 27 killed plus 70 injured[109]
- 1922 Winslow Junction train derailment, Winslow Junction, New Jersey; 7 killed plus 89 injured[110]
- 1922 Missouri Pacific collision, Sulphur Springs, Missouri; 34 killed plus 150 injured[111][112]
- 1923 Glenrock train wreck, Glenrock, Wyoming; 30 killed plus 66 injured. Remains the state of Wyoming's deadliest rail disaster to date[113][114]
- 1925 Rockport train wreck, Rockport, New Jersey; ~45 killed plus ~25 injured[115]
- 1925 Granite train wreck, Granite, Colorado; 2 killed plus 107 injured[116]
- 1925 Frisco derailment, Victoria, Marshall County, Mississippi; ~20 killed[117][118]
- 1926 Granite train wreck, Granite, Colorado; ~30 killed plus 54 injured[119]
- 1926 Ponce de Leon (train)/Royal Palm (train) collision, Rockmart, Georgia; 19 killed plus 113 injured. Inspired the song "The Wreck of the Royal Palm"[120]
- 1928 Times Square derailment, New York City; 18 killed plus ~100 injured[121][122][123]
1930s
[edit]- 1938 Custer Creek train wreck, Saugus, Montana; 47 killed plus 75 injured. Remains the state of Montana's deadliest rail disaster to date[124][125]
- 1938 South Jordan rail crossing disaster, South Jordan, Utah; 24 killed plus 15 injured. Led to state and eventually federal law requiring the practice of school buses stopping to look and listen for trains at grade crossings[126]
1940s
[edit]- 1940 Little Falls Gulf Curve crash, Little Falls, New York; 31 killed plus 51 injured. Led to a realignment to reduce the angle of the curve, which required diverting the Mohawk River farther south and filling in the old channel[127][128]
- 1940 Doodlebug disaster, Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio; 43 killed[129][130]
- 1942 Exchange Place station (PATH) derailment, Jersey City, New Jersey; 5 killed plus hundreds injured[131]
- 1943 Lackawanna Limited wreck, Wayland, New York; 29 killed plus 114 injured. Led the Public Service Commission to order the DL&W to install derailing devices as an added safety measure on most sidings connecting to the main lines[132][133]
- 1943 Frankford Junction train wreck, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; 79 killed plus 117 injured. Pennsylvania's deadliest rail disaster to date[134][135]
- 1943 Rennert railroad accident, Rennert, North Carolina; 74 killed. North Carolina's deadliest rail disaster to date[136][137][138]
- 1944 Stockton train wreck, Stockton, Georgia; 47 killed plus 41 injured. State of Georgia's deadliest rail disaster to date[139][140]
- 1944 "Tragedy on Election Day", Aguadilla, Puerto Rico; 16 killed plus 50 injured. Puerto Rico's deadliest rail disaster to date[141]
- 1944 Bagley train wreck, Bagley, Utah; ~50 killed plus 79 injured. Utah's deadliest rail disaster to date[142][140]
- 1945 Michigan train wreck, Michigan, North Dakota; 34 killed plus hundreds injured. North Dakota's deadliest rail disaster to date[143][144]
- 1945 California Limited derailment, Santa Anita, California; 5 killed plus hundreds injured[145]
- 1946 Naperville train disaster, Naperville, Illinois; 45 killed plus 125 injured. Eventually convinced the Interstate Commerce Commission to rule that trains traveling 80 mph or more must have "an automatic cab signal, automatic train stop or automatic train control system". (Positive Train Control has since been added as an option to the rule post-ICC)[146][147][148]
- 1947 Downers Grove train wreck, Downers Grove, Illinois; 3 killed plus 30 injured[149][150]
1950s
[edit]- 1950 Rockville Centre train crash, Rockville Centre, New York; 32 killed plus 100+ injured. This along with the Kew Gardens crash pushed LIRR ownership (PRR) to speed up modernization of the system[151][152]
- 1950 Chicago streetcar crash, Chicago, Illinois; 34 killed plus 50 injured. Led to various safety regulations for transit vehicles, most notably the phasing out of inward-opening doors[153]
- 1950 The Milwaukee Electric Railway and Light Company Rapid Transit & Speedrail Crash, Greenfield, Wisconsin; 8 killed plus 40 injured. Crash ultimately doomed Wisconsin's only rapid transit line[154]
- 1950 Kew Gardens train crash, New York City; 78 killed plus hundreds injured in deadliest surface rail accident in New York.[155]
- 1951 Woodbridge train wreck, Woodbridge, New Jersey; ~85 killed plus hundreds injured. New Jersey's deadliest rail disaster to date[156][157]
- 1953 Pennsylvania Railroad train wreck, Washington, D.C.; 0 killed but 44 injured; served as inspiration for the ending of Silver Streak (film)
- 1953 New York Central Railroad Accident, Conneaut, Ohio; 21 killed plus 49 injured. The second of only two U.S. rail disasters to involve four trains[158]
- 1955 Spring City School bus-train collision, Spring City, Tennessee; 11 killed plus many injured[159][160]
- 1956 Redondo Junction train wreck, Los Angeles, California; 30 killed plus 117 injured. California's deadliest rail disaster (not involving an automobile) was one of the first to have its aftermath broadcast live[161][162][163]
- 1956 Collision of the Chief (train), Springer, New Mexico; 20 killed plus 35 injured. New Mexico's deadliest rail disaster to date[164][165]
- Great Train Wreck of 1956. Four killed in a head-on collision of freights near Pineola, Florida. Collision may have been averted had crews agreed to use new radios but refused to unless their pay was increased[166]
- 1958 Newark Bay rail accident, Bayonne, New Jersey; 48 killed plus 48 injured[167][168]
- 1959 Meldrim trestle disaster, Meldrim, Georgia; 23 killed[169][170]
1960s
[edit]- 1960 San Francisco Chief Disaster, Bakersfield, California; 17 killed plus ~60 injured[171]
- 1961 City of Denver-schoolbus collision, Auburn, Colorado; 20 killed plus 16 injured. Remains Colorado's deadliest traffic accident to date[172][173]
- 1962 Steelton train derailment, Steelton, Pennsylvania; 19 killed plus 120+ injured[174][175][176]
- 1963 Chualar bus crash, Chualar, California; 32 killed plus 25 injured. Remains the deadliest U.S. traffic accident to date and California's deadliest to involve a train; also one of a series of events that led to closer scrutiny of migrant labor conditions and fueled the emergence of the chicano and farmworkers labor movements[177][178]
- 1966 Great Northern Buelow collision where westbound Western Star crashed head-on near Chester, Montana with an eastbound Empire Builder carrying Great Northern Railway's then-president John M. Budd; 2 killed 79 injured.[179][180]
- 1966 Everett, Massachusetts train crash, Everett, Massachusetts; 13 killed plus 21 injured. Led to further pressure from government officials to phase out any equipment with inward opening doors and lacking emergency exits plus demand to trucks carrying hazardous materials use "designated crossings" only[181][182]
- 1969 New Canaan Branch collision, Darien, Connecticut; 4 killed plus 40 injured[183][184]
1970s
[edit]- 1971 Salem, Illinois, derailment; 11 killed plus 163 injured. Led the NTSB to recommended improvements in wheel-slip detection devices for locomotives and in pre-departure testing procedures, and that the FRA draft safety standards to address the ejection of passengers through windows in the event of accidents[185][186][187]
- 1972 Gilchrest Road, New York crossing accident; 5 killed plus 46 injured. Led the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles to require all bus drivers complete a certain amount of requirements to qualify for driving[188][189]
- 1972 Chicago commuter rail crash, Chicago, Illinois; 45 killed plus hundreds injured[190][191][192]
- 1973 Littlefield, Texas bus/train crash; 7 killed plus 16 injured[193][194]
- 1974 Decatur tank car explosion, Decatur, Illinois; 7 killed plus hundreds injured[195][196]
- 1976 1976 Beckemeyer train accident, 12 killed and four injured.
- 1976 New Canaan Branch collision, New Canaan, Connecticut; 2 killed plus 29 injured[184][197]
- 1977 Chicago Loop derailment, Chicago, Illinois; 11 killed plus 180+ injured. Led the CTA to forbid motormen to proceed past a red signal "on sight" without first getting permission from the Control Center[198][199]
- 1978 Waverly, Tennessee, tank car explosion; 16 killed plus 43 injured. Resulted in a major rework of how authorities deal with such hazmat disasters, with Tennessee/TOCD creating a set of standards and the Tennessee Hazardous Materials Institute for training hazmat responders; was also one of the events that helped push the establishment of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)[200][201][202]
- 1979 Southwest Limited (predecessor to the Southwest Chief) derailment, Lawrence, Kansas; 2 killed plus 69 injured[203][204]
- 1979 Harvey, Illinois train collision; 2 killed plus 38 injured. Revealed grave deficiencies in railroad operations that had subsided in the US by the late 1970s[205][206]
- 1979 Philadelphia Conrail collision, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; 1 killed plus hundreds injured[207][208]
1980s
[edit]- 1982 Washington Metro train derailment, Washington, DC; 3 killed plus 25 injured[209][210]
- 1984 Montrealer (train) derailment, Williston, Vermont; 5 killed plus 100+ injured[211][212][213]
- 1987 Maryland train collision, Chase, Maryland; 16 killed plus 164 injured[214][215][216]
- 1989 San Bernardino train disaster, San Bernardino, California; 6 killed plus 7 injured[217][218]
1990s
[edit]- 1990 Market–Frankford Line subway derailment, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; 4 killed plus 162 injured[219][220][221]
- 1991 Dunsmuir, California derailment; no human deaths but vast numbers of aquatic animals poisoned to death by chemical leak[222][223][224]
- 1991 Lugoff derailment in South Carolina; 8 killed, 76 injured[225]
- 1991 Union Square derailment, New York City; 5 killed plus 161 injured[226][227][228]
- 1992 Nemadji River bridge derailment, Superior, Wisconsin; no direct human deaths but many animals—wild and domestic—confirmed killed by chemical leak; 50,000 to 80,000 people evacuated from Superior and from Duluth, Minnesota[229][230][231][232]
- 1993 Big Bayou Canot rail accident, Mobile, Alabama; 47 killed plus 103 injured. Alabama's deadliest rail disaster to date[233][234][235]
- 1995 Fox River Grove bus–train collision, Fox River Grove, Illinois; 7 killed plus 21 injured[236][237][238]
- 1996 Secaucus train collision, Secaucus, New Jersey; 3 killed plus 162 injured[239][240]
- 1996 Maryland train collision, Silver Spring, Maryland; 11 killed plus 26 injured[241][242][243]
- 1999 Bourbonnais, Illinois, train crash; 11 killed plus 122 injured[244][245][246]
21st century
[edit]2000s
[edit]- 2002 Minot train derailment, Minot, North Dakota; 1 killed plus hundreds made ill[247][248][249]
- 2002 Placentia train collision, Placentia, California; 2 killed plus 141 injured[250][251]
- 2004 Macdona rail disaster, Macdona, Texas; 3 killed plus ~50 sickened[252][253][254]
- 2005 Graniteville train crash, Graniteville, South Carolina; 9 killed plus hundreds made ill. Possibly South Carolina's deadliest rail disaster to date[255][256][257]
- 2005 Metra Rock Island derailment, Chicago, Illinois; 2 killed plus 83 injured[258][259]
- 2008 Massachusetts train collision, Newton, Massachusetts; 1 killed plus 12 injured[260][261]
- 2008 Chatsworth train collision, Chatsworth, California; 25 killed plus 135 injured[262][263][264]
- 2009 June 2009 Washington Metro train collision, Washington, DC; 9 killed plus 80 injured[265][266][267]
- 2009 Walt Disney World monorail accident, Walt Disney World Resort; Two monorail trains collided while one was reversing, killed one pilot and injured seven guests[268]
2010s
[edit]- 2012 Midland train crash, Midland, Texas; 4 killed plus 16 injured[269][270][271]
- 2013 December 2013 Spuyten Duyvil derailment, New York City; 4 killed plus 61 injured[272][273][274]
- 2015 Valhalla train crash, Valhalla, New York; 6 killed plus 15 injured[275][276][277]
- 2015 Oxnard train derailment, Oxnard, California; 1 killed plus 29 injured[278][279][280]
- 2015 Philadelphia train derailment, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; 8 killed plus hundreds injured[281][282][283]
- 2016 Chester, Pennsylvania, train derailment; 2 killed plus 31 injured[284][285][286]
- 2016 Hoboken train crash, Hoboken, New Jersey; 1 killed plus 114 injured[287][288][289]
- 2017 Washington train derailment, DuPont, Washington; 3 killed plus 62 injured[290][291][292]
- 2017 Brooklyn train crash, Brooklyn, New York; 103 injured[293][294][295]
- 2018 Cayce, South Carolina train collision; 2 killed plus 116 injured[296][297][298]
2020s
[edit]- 2022 Missouri train derailment, Mendon, Missouri; 4 killed and 150 injured.[299]
- 2023 Ohio train derailment, East Palestine, Ohio. No fatalities, but many nearby residents reported symptoms of illness[300]
See also
[edit]- Lists of rail accidents
- List of rail accidents by country
- List of disasters in the United States by death toll
- BNSF Railway accidents and incidents
References
[edit]- ^ Walton, Steven A.; Armstrong, Michael J. (2019). The Majestic Nature of the North: Thomas Kelah Wharton's Journeys in Antebellum America through the Hudson River Valley and New England. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. p. 29. ISBN 9781438473277.
- ^ Shaw (1978), pp. 16–18.
- ^ Whittle, C. (2000) [1838]. Prince, Richard E. (ed.). Seaboard Air Line Railway: Steam Boats, Locomotives, and History. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. p. 7. ISBN 9780253336958.
- ^ "Greater Grand Crossing". www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org.
- ^ Rhodes, James F. (2009). History of the United States: From the Compromise of 1850 to the Mckinley-Bryan Campaign of 1896. Vol. II. New York: Cosimo Classics. p. 482. ISBN 9781605207469.
- ^ Hamerla, Ralph R. (2006). An American Scientist on the Research Frontier: Edward Morley, Community, and Radical Ideas in Nineteenth-Century Science. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer Science & Business Media. p. 97. ISBN 9781402040894.
- ^ "Reminisces of a Fearful Accident Twenty-One Years Ago". Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineer's Monthly Journal. Vol. XI. Grand International Division of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. 1877. p. 60.
- ^ Arenson, Adam (2011). The Great Heart of the Republic. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press. pp. 71–76. ISBN 9780674059184.
- ^ Ivory, Karen (2015). Pennsylvania Disasters: True Stories of Tragedy and Survival. Guilford, CT: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 22–24. ISBN 9781493013210.
- ^ Selcer, Richard F. (2006). Civil War America, 1850 To 1875. Almanacs of American Life. New York: Infobase Publishing. p. 39. ISBN 9781438107974.
- ^ Haine, Edgar A. (1993). "Bridge Washout Causes Train Disaster, Indiana - June 1859 - 42 Dead". Railroad Wrecks. New York, London, Toronto: Associated University Presses. pp. 36–37. ISBN 9780845348444.
- ^ Frank, Lisa Tendrich (2009). Civil War: People and Perspectives. Santa Barbara, CA, Denver, CO and Oxford: ABC-CLIO. p. 122. ISBN 9781598840353.
- ^ Ivory, Karen (2015). Pennsylvania Disasters: True Stories of Tragedy and Survival. Guilford, CT: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 27–30. ISBN 9781493013210.
- ^ Vogel, Charity (2013). The Angola Horror: The 1867 Train Wreck That Shocked the Nation and Transformed American Railroads. Ithaca, NY and London: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801469756.
- ^ Selcer, Richard F. (2006). Civil War America, 1850 To 1875. Almanacs of American Life. New York: Infobase Publishing. p. 40. ISBN 9781438107974.
- ^ Turner, David (2011). Wappinger. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. p. 57. ISBN 9780738575599.
- ^ Railroad Magazine Feb 1942: states toll at 26, including 5 crew members.
- ^ Middleton, William D.; Smerk, George; Diehl, Roberta L. (2007). Encyclopedia of North American Railroads. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. p. 94. ISBN 9780253027993.
- ^ May, Andrew J. (2015). "'The Starched Boundaries of Civilization': Sympathetic Allegiance and the Subversive Politics of Affect in Colonial India". In Jackson, Will; Manktelow, Emily (eds.). Subverting Empire: Deviance and Disorder in the British Colonial World. Cambridge Imperial & Post-Colonial Studies. Basingstoke and New York: Springer. pp. 76–77. ISBN 9781137465870.
- ^ "Railway News: Pickering Valley". Railway World: In Which is Incorporated the United States Railroad and Mining Register. Quarto Volume 3: 1028. October 27, 1877 – via Google Books.
- ^ Mangan, Gregg (2015). On This Day in Connecticut History. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 20–21. ISBN 9781625851956.
- ^ Annual Report of the Board of Railroad Commissioners Volume 11, Part 1880. Wright & Potter, State Printers. 1880. pp. 186–187. Retrieved February 19, 2022.
- ^ "Meeting A Terrible Fate". The New York Times. January 14, 1882. Retrieved December 18, 2023.
- ^ Seacrest, William B. (2006). "1883: Tehachapi Runaway Train". California Disasters, 1812-1899: Firsthand Accounts of Fires, Shipwrecks, Floods, Epidemics, Earthquakes and Other California Tragedies. Sanger, CA: Quill Driver Books. pp. 163–165. ISBN 9781884995491.
- ^ Massachusetts Board of Railroad Commissioners (1887). Annual Report of the Board of Railroad Commissioners 1887. Wright and Potter, state printers. pp. 64–68. Retrieved February 18, 2022.
- ^ "September 14, 1886 Train Wreck". The Buffalo Commercial. September 14, 1886. p. 3 – via newspapers.com.
- ^ Ferguson, J. A. (2013). "The Wrong Rail in the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time: The 1887 West Hartford Bridge Disaster" (PDF). Vermont Historiy Journal. 81 (1): 52–74. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
- ^ Haine, Edgar A. (1993). "Busey Bridge Forrest Hills Disaster: Roslindale, Massachusetts - March 1887 - 30 Dead". Railroad Wrecks. New York, London, Toronto: Associated University Presses. pp. 55–56. ISBN 9780845348444.
- ^ Wolmar, Christian (2012). The Great Railway Revolution: The Epic Story of the American Railroad. London: Atlantic Books. ISBN 9780857897794.
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1910 Green Mountain train wreck.
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1919 New York Central collision.
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On a hectic Labor Day, 1920, a train full of baseball fans left Louisville, headed for a game in Denver. At the same time, a train left Denver, with riders bound for a long weekend in Eldorado Springs. The Denver train departed before the track was cleared, and the two collided at Globeville, where I-25 and I-70 now meet. Twelve people were killed, half of them from Louisville, and over two hundred were injured.
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Globeville was at the edge of the Denver city limits… scene of the line's only major wreck, when two cars collided on Labor Day 1920, killing 12 and injuring 214. The holiday may have contributed to the disaster; the cars were overloaded and the motormen called in to handle the extra crowds were inexperienced. The wreck was front page news for weeks…
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1944 Stockton train wreck.
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1945 Michigan train wreck.
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This mode of occupant ejection seems to have occurred as early as the passenger train derailment at Redondo Junction, California, in 1956
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