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An 'Appalling Catastrophe'
By Todd DeFeo
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn.
–
It was an “appalling catastrophe,” the
newspaper headlines proclaimed.
At about 8 p.m. on Sept. 29, 1906, a
northbound Louisville & Nashville Railroad passenger train – No. 102 –
steamed towards a swing bridge crossing the Cumberland River. Near the
overpass, a glowing red light broke the night’s darkness, signaling
for an approaching train to stop.
The swing bridge was open, waiting for
the steamboat Buttoff to pass through the open swing bridge on its way
to Paducah, Ky.
Suddenly, engineer Frank Porter yanked
on the Johnson Bar, trying to reverse the locomotive before the train
reached the open bridge.
Sparks flew from the engine and the
train jolted, but was unable to completely stop before plunging into
the Cumberland River.
The train’s locomotive, its tender, a
mail car and a baggage car plunged into the Cumberland River. The
train’s passenger coaches, however, remained on the trestle with the
passengers inside, panicking and trying to find a way out of the cars.
“It seems a cruel irony of fate that
after the fearful disaster, immediately the draw was closed, and the
steamer passed under the bridge without any trouble or hindrance,
showing that there was no necessity for an open draw,” an article
appearing in the Oct. 1, 1906, edition of The Clarksville
Leaf-Chronicle reads.
Porter and the train’s express
messenger – Will T. Wood – were the only two fatalities in the wreck.
The train’s fireman – John S. Moran – survived and “found himself
clinging to an iron spike fastened to the masonry of a bridge pier,”
Dennis Mize wrote in his 1999 book, L&N’s Memphis Line.
“My first impression was that the
train had stopped very suddenly and violently,” said R.L. Morris,
baggage master on the train. “I knew distinctively that this meant
danger of some character. … At the moment that I sensed danger, I ran
to the back end of the car and started to jump, thinking that a
terrible wreck was imminent. Then the car turned turtle and went down.
It was all over so quickly that I have little recollection of
subsequent events.”
In an interview with The Clarksville
Leaf-Chronicle, Moran “had little to say, however, for he had no
coherent recollection of anything from the moment the locomotive took
the fatal leap until he found himself struggling for life in the deep,
treacherous and swirling waters,” the newspaper wrote.
“The last time I saw engineer Porter
he was sitting on his seat box,” Moran told the newspaper shortly
after the wreck. “I was shoveling in coal, getting ready for the hill,
doing this after we had blown for signal. No word was spoken by Porter
or myself. I was not looking for or paying any attention to the
signals and hence did not see them. We could not have been going more
than four or five miles an hour when the engine went down.”
The newspaper credited the train’s air
brakes for preventing a far worse catastrophe. If not for the system,
the publication predicted, perhaps all of the train’s cars would have
plunged into the Cumberland River.
Ironically, the newspaper reported,
after the wreck, the steamboat easily passed under the closed bridge.
Published in the
February 2004 Cross-Tie.
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