Death on the line
INNOCENT VICTIMS OF
THE RAILWAY AGE
The opening of a railway system for Bourne during
the 19th century was one of the great engineering feats in our history but
it was not achieved without a cost in human lives.
Many of the construction workers were killed while working in dangerous
conditions and with equipment that by today’s standards would be
considered to be primitive while others succumbed to the unhygienic
conditions, particularly a smallpox outbreak which swept through the
workforce in 1893. But there were other innocent victims, members of the
public who lost their lives in less hazardous circumstances, either
through carelessness or by accident, bringing tragedy to families in an
era that has become known as the railway age.
Railway lines have been a magnet for adventurous children and today they
have been largely secured against young intruders but during Victorian
times the installations were easily accessible and the novelty still
apparent. A level crossing carried the main line from the station at the
Red Hall across South Street where youngsters were frequently cautioned
and told to stay away but they were always back, attracted by the sights
and sounds of steam engines, passenger trains and freight wagons, and on
Monday 8th July 1872 this fascination cost a little boy his life.
John Northern, aged 6, had been playing with his friends around the
crossing and as a train approached they were sent away by the gatekeeper,
Samuel Davis. But as his pals fled, the boy managed to squeeze unseen
through a space of barely nine inches wide between the gate and the
gatepost to remain by the line when the train came through, standing so
close that he was hit by one of the carriages as it passed and death was
almost instantaneous. Railway officials told the inquest that the gates
and gatepost were the same as all others on the line and that no similar
accident had ever occurred before. The crossing, however, was often
frequented by young lads who gathered there to watch the trains go by. The
jury returned a verdict of accidental death and expressed the hope that
something might be done to prevent a recurrence.
The boy was the son of a labourer, John Northern, who lived in Eastgate,
and the inquest was told that the family were in needy circumstances and
could not afford to bury him. The jury therefore recommended that the
Midland and Great Northern Railway Company should help pay for the funeral
and the jurymen each left one shilling towards the cost.
A more bizarre fatality also occurred in 1872 resulting in the death of
Mrs Ann Thurlby, aged 60, who lost her life in a terrible accident that
actually occurred on the station platform outside the Red Hall on April
8th. The inquest was told that the dead woman was a very stout person
which may have been a contributory cause of her death. Her daughter, Emma
Thurlby, aged, 20, said in evidence that she went to the railway station
with her mother to buy a ticket for the 8.05 am Bourne to Essendine train
but someone told her to make haste or she would be too late.
The engine driver, William Marsden, said that after the train was in
motion, he saw Mrs Thurlby running along the platform. Someone from inside
one of the carriages opened the door and she attempted to get in but fell
down and was crushed to death between the carriage and the platform. Dr
James Watson Burdwood, surgeon for the company, was called but she had
suffered terrible injuries and her body was mangled. Evidence from railway
staff revealed that the train was not leaving the station on its scheduled
journey but merely moving away from the platform for the purpose of
shunting some wagons to be attached to the rear of the train. Driver
Marsden said that he had called out loudly to Mrs Thurlby to this effect
but it transpired that she was hard of hearing. The jury returned a
verdict of accidental death.
Thirty years later, another child was killed on the crossing, this time a
girl. May Victoria Stubley, aged 8, was walking over it when she was
knocked down and fatally injured on 21st September 1905. Martha Michelson,
who witnessed the accident, told an inquest that she had been using the
crossing with her sister and the deceased when she saw a goods train
approaching from Bourne station. At the same time, she heard a passenger
train coming from Spalding. She called to the girl to get out of the way
and to wait until the goods train had passed but instead, she took no
notice and stood on the inside rail of the line on which the passenger
train was travelling. "The next thing, I saw that the child was under the
passenger train", she said. "When the train had gone by, I rushed over and
found that she was dead."
The driver of the passenger train told the hearing that his view had been
hidden by the goods train, the crossing being in the centre of a curve,
and it was suggested by the jury that in future, instructions should be
issued to drivers to sound their whistle on approaching the crossing from
either direction but railway officials warned that whistling engines had
in the past brought complaints from residents living in the vicinity and
damages had been successfully claimed against the company in some
instances. The jury returned a verdict of accidental death and added that
there was no blame attached to anyone concerning the girl's death.
There is no doubt that the early railways were dangerous and the level
crossing in South Street a hazard and inconvenience for the increasing
traffic flows of the 20th century but it was finally closed in 1959 and
the gates removed six years later.
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