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We have all seen derailments and vehicles slammed at crossings.  But I have run across pictures of several wrecks that are almost comical.  Feel free to add your own captions.

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Dave: Hey Sam did you remember to lock her down before you grabbed your lunch bucket?

Sam: Me? I thought you took care of that.

Dave: Now worry... finish your lunch and we'll go back and take care of it.

Sam: Yea, good idea. What's the worse that could happen, she rolls out into traffic?

Dave: Fat chance.


  


Cop in photo scratched head and ask the other "What the heck just happened?"

Second cop replies "I'm guessing the Magna-Traction failed.


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Sam & Dave respond with, "Looks like we're gonna get some time off."



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Hot Water posted:
Rusty Traque posted:
SantaFeJim posted:

Okay Mike... you are cleared to enter from track six.

SIX? I'm on track seven! Re-align the table NOW!!!

"Here we see number 347 crawling it's way out of the pit, ready to join its pack on the hunt for fresh freight cars." -Marlin Perkins

Rusty

Better tell Mr. Perkins that it is number 247.

He's been informed.  Corrected in post-production.  I think Jim slipped Marlin a fast one...

Rusty

Last edited by Rusty Traque
Murnane posted:

I've collected a bunch of "train wreck" pictures at this link - kind of more "goofy" train wreck pictures than gruesome bad ones...  https://www.pinterest.com/richmurnane/train-wrecks/

the Train wreck at Gare Montparnasse, Paris, France, 1895 picture is what started the collection for me, always a classic!

Train_wreck_at_Montparnasse_1895

You can always add such a classic scene to your own property........ I've no idea what the layout looks like inside, but it must be a beauty!

Gare-Montparnasse-1895-crash-recreation-brazil

http://www.urbanghostsmedia.co...recreated-in-brazil/

Last edited by Firewood

Well, all I'll say is that the 247L might be resting in the turntable pit, but it's clean and well-maintained, even at the age of 18, and that is so typical of Santa Fe standards -- we only ran clean locomotives into the pit.    20 demerits for the employee who left the derail off the rail, and 20 demerits for the employee in charge of the locomotive.

Last edited by Number 90
palallin posted:
Casey Jones2 posted:

Oops...

photo

 

How the heck did THAT happen?

Have a question about this. Just plain curiosity.  Is the locomotive set back on the rails and towed back for repair without side rods?  They fire it up again and limp it back, haha not likely.  What is usually the course of action whether an old steamer like this or a diesel after a wreck?  Ok that's a broad question so lets say able to roll on the tracks again vs not.

 

unionstationwreck4

(Federal Express wreck, Washington Union Station, 1953)

...And what's interesting...and timely...about this incident is that it occurred just days before the inauguration of Dwight D. Eisenhower....just a few hundred yards from the Capitol...and the place (Acacia Mutual Life Insurance Co., 51 Louisiana Ave. N.W.) where Dad worked.

Nowadays one can imagine that terrorism would've been foremost in the minds of everyone.

It wasn't so, in this case.

I was 9 years young at the time. 

KD

645 posted:

It wasn't funny - the two crew members on the lead engine (which was reduced to that stripped frame hanging into space) DIED! Below links have more details on this tragic accident:

http://images.ulib.csuohio.edu...anohio/id/2615/rec/2

http://www.trainorders.com/dis...on/read.php?2,395613

No kidding. That NTSB report states that the superstructures of the two locomotives--a GP35 and GP40--were crushed into a mass 12 feet long.

"On Saturday, November 4, 1972, the Central Railroad of New Jersey westbound station at Elizabeth, NJ was destroyed in a spectacular derailment.

The cause of the 2:15 PM wreck was determined to be a boxcar which was too high to make it under the Penn Central's (originally Pennsylvania Railroad) Northeast Corridor bridge.

The car was about midway through the 81-car freight train bound for Philadelphia and Chicago. Cars of excess height were suppose to travel on tracks 2 and 3, which had a lower roadbed. This day the train was routed west on track 4."

Because the derailment occurred during the middle of a weekend afternoon, not near a rush-hour, and after a recent passenger train had departed the station .... the only people in the station were members of the CNJ Police Department in their small office in the corner of the station. While some were trapped in debris, everyone lived. This could have been a very terrible accident.

 

That C&O gondola full of scrap metal blocks, is inside the station (this is a street view of the station) ...

cnj1

 

Cleanup crews prepare to re-truck the C&O gondola using CNJ wreck crane number 6. In the background, Penn Central GG-1 4931 passes overhead with a passenger local .....

cnj2

 

The car that started it all, Missouri Pacific number 38487, lies partially buried in the station .....

cnj3

 

The cars not involved in the wreck have been removed while cleanup workers await the arrival of wreck cranes .....

cnj4

 

Another Missouri Pacific car, number 753322, is being extracted from the station building (the beautiful clock tower is part of the eastbound station, across the tracks from the accident ....

cnj5

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Last edited by CNJ Jim

The accident involving OV-8, could of been avoided.  There was too much trust accepted in both parties in regard to radio communication..  As a result of this, a new rule was issued with regard to this never happening again.  It was against the rules for any crew member on the head end of his train to inquire as to the condition of the block ahead.  The train did in fact have to approach signals before getting to the bridge.  Meaning the bridge signal was at stop position...

Marty

Yep, keep in mind that in more than one of these photos, a railroader was killed gruesomely, though likely quickly.

And even if someone wasn't hurt, someone probably lost their jobs over a few of these and had their professional lives ruined.

This just isn't funny to me. Reminds me of all those U-tube videos of military and civilian plane crashes. That's not entertainment, people got killed.

In doing some family history research, I discovered that my great uncle had a lengthy history of damaging railroad property.

Sent to the reformatory at 15 years old, he eventually became a hobo, riding the rails all over the US. He accidently Burned down the Lehigh Valley station in Ulster, PA, damaged railroad signals in Nevada and stole a speeder and crashed it into a mail train derailing the locomotive. His most "famous" crime, the one that made it in to at least 15 newspapers across the US, was the derailment of a passenger train near Salt Lake City, Utah.

At 14 years old he hopped a freight, fell off and was badly injured. Perhaps this is what caused him to seek his revenge against railroads. All of this was from 1910 to about 1924.

He was not the only member of his family to be injured by a railroad mishap. His father, my great grand father, fell off a train and had to have part of his leg amputated. His mother, who was elderly and almost deaf, died when she was struck by a CNJ locomotive while walking to work along the train tracks one very foggy morning. 

 

 

 

 

I understand railroad incidents all to well myself. Some of these I do find amusing and wondering the background of them. I have personally been involved with probably over 50 fatalities including 5 employees, that includes one that reported directly to me. 

All incidents are different, and have their own circumstances. Some effect you in different ways. I have one in particular that I can still see today as clear as the day it happened on April 6th 2006. 

So if it effects you that much, time to look at something else.

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