The Onawa train wreck was a fatal railroad accident that happened two miles west of Onawa, Maine on December 20, 1919 and killed 23 people.[1]
Onawa train wreck | |
---|---|
Details | |
Date | December 20, 1919 7:14 a.m. |
Location | Northeast Piscataquis, Piscataquis County, near Onawa, Maine |
Coordinates | 45°22′14″N 69°24′35″W / 45.37056°N 69.40972°W |
Country | United States |
Line | International Railway of Maine |
Operator | Canadian Pacific Railway |
Incident type | head-on collision |
Cause | mis-reading of train orders |
Statistics | |
Trains | 2 |
Passengers | 300 |
Deaths | 23 |
Injured | 50 |
The line concerned was constructed and operated by the Canadian Pacific Railway, known as the International Railway of Maine. It crossed the state and provided a shortcut between the Canadian cities of Montreal and Saint John, New Brunswick.[2] On the morning of December 20, 1919, Train No. 39, an eleven-car immigrant special bound for Montreal, was moving west in four sections. Third 39 carried steerage passengers from the liner Empress of France, which had docked in Saint John the previous day,[3] carrying a few Canadian soldiers and 300 immigrants, mostly English and Scottish.[4] By the time Third 39 departed Brownville Junction at 6:25 a.m., it was running over five hours late.[3]
Freight train No.78 had departed Megantic at 6 p.m. the previous evening. It consisted of 26 cars[3] and had been waiting on a siding at Moosehead, where it had allowed the first two sections of No.39 to pass.[5] It had received orders that it was five hours ahead of Third 39, giving it plenty of time to reach Morkill. It left Greenville at 6:40 a.m. and arrived in a siding at Morkill at 6:57 a.m. At Morkill further orders were received to the effect that Third 39 was late, and Fourth 39 was eight hours late. This order was misread and the freight train mistakenly believed that Third 39 was now running eight hours late, giving them time to reach Brownville Junction before the end of their 16-hour shift.[3]
At 7:14 a.m., as dawn approached, the trains collided head-on just west of Onawa station on a curve beside Little Greenwood Pond[5] at a combined speed of 50 mph. The baggage car next to the engine was 'entirely demolished'. The next passenger car telescoped the one behind it for two-thirds of its length.[6] The wreckage then caught fire, adding to the horror.[1] Seventeen people were killed outright, including six children, the enginemen and firemen of both trains, and six more dying after being freed from the wreckage.[1] Fifty people were injured, some severely, and were taken by special train to hospitals in Brownville Junction and Bangor.[4]
References
edit- ^ a b c Haine, Edgar A. (1993). Railroad Wrecks. Associated University Presses. p. 148. ISBN 0-8453-4844-2.
- ^ "Onawa Train Wreck". Katahdin Regional Wiki. Archived from the original on March 9, 2012.[unreliable source?]
- ^ a b c d Calvert, J.B. (December 7, 2005). "Train Order Accidents". Railways: History, Signalling, Engineering.
- ^ a b "C. P. R. TRAIN WRECK KILLS 23, INJURIES 50". New York Times. December 21, 1919.
- ^ a b Anderson, Ken (May 2006). "Profiles in Rural Maine". All Maine Matters.
- ^ "Report". Interstate Commerce Commission. 1920-01-17. Retrieved 2010-07-28. - First accessed from a defunct URL Archived 2011-08-23 at the Wayback Machine.