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ROYTON, LMR 8th February 1961
Two ECS Cravens twin-units collided at about
40mph with the buffer stops at Royton Station at 6.12am. 5 persons injured. The
leading unit comprised two motor coaches, each with a Rolls-Royce 238bhp engine
and mechanical drive, built Sept/Oct 1959. The trailing unit was an AEC-engined
power-twin, built March 1958. The leading coach, having destroyed the buffer
stop and the wall behind it, dropped approximately two feet to the level of High
Barn Street and continued across it entering houses Nos.13 & 15 and coming
to rest with its front end projecting into their back yards. The leading bogie
became detached and fell into the cellar of one of the houses. Damage was also
caused to adjacent properties in the terraced row. Fortunately one of the two
destroyed houses was a lock-up shop, unoccupied at the time, and due to the
early hour the occupants of the other houses were upstairs. The leading end of
the second car overhung but did not drop onto the street, although its bogie
fell from under it. Though the leading car suffered from front/rear-end bodywork
and underframe damage, the mainframe was not distorted and the buffers were only
bent. The rear unit was undamaged. It was concluded that the driver mishandled
the brakes, as well as unwittingly accelerating the train, during the 1 in 62
descent to Royton Station.
Information from Peter Mullen
Richard Greenwood adds: "The
leading car was M51701. The elderly couple in bed in the house which 51701
demolished were carried out into the open air on top of the unit." Many
thanks are also due to Richard for supplying the following photographs- |
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These shots were taken about 8.30am- |
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This vehicle was the second in the formation, and it is
overhanging the wall on the right side, behind the woman with the
umbrella. |
To the right of the first picture could be found the leading
DMBS embedded in the house. |
From the opposite of High Barn Street, and the DMC seen in
the first picture is on the right. The DMBS is on the left. |
Two views of the severely bashed front of the
DMBS. The remaining roof and some more wall has been demolished from the
house. The vehicle was rebuilt and returned to traffic using a spare cab. |
These two shots were taken about midday, when
the DMC had been moved away from the wall and the DMBS has been partially
dragged across the road. Note the 'ramp' to lift the vehicle back into the
slightly higher yard level, which appear to be built using timber from the
rubble! |
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Peter Dawson wrote the following for the Christmas 2003 edition of the STORM
(Support the Oldham Rochdale Manchester line group) newsletter:
Despite what the
Press will have you believe railways are considerably safer than roads, and
accidents rare. When accidents do happen though, they tend to be spectacular.
As was the case in Royton on February 8th 1961
At
6.12am on that morning, the 6.5am Shaw to Royton empty 4-coach dmu crashed
through the buffers at Royton station at about 40mph. The stops and a stone
wall beyond were destroyed and the leading coach (M51701), after dropping 3
feet into High Barn St, carried on and completely destroyed 2 houses and badly
damaged 3 others.
Amazingly,
none of the 5 occupants of the tenanted houses were seriously injured, nor
were the guard and off-duty fireman. The driver jumped onto the platform
immediately before the collision and suffered a fractured skull and other
injuries.
Mr
Tom Whittaker told The Oldham
Chronicle: " At about 6.15 I suddenly heard the noise of a diesel
hooter. The driver must have been trying to warn us he was in trouble. The
noise went on for 30 or more seconds; then there was a terrific crash".
At
No 9 High Barn St, Mr Tom Pollitt was also in bed when the train demolished
the home of his neighbour, Mrs Greenwood. " I was wondering whether to
get up or have another 5 minutes in bed, then I heard the diesel hooter. It
didn't stop and I was just wondering what was the reason for all the noise
when there was a terrific bang and the whole house shook. I shot out of bed
and our little boy, Tom, was crying and shouting that there was a flying
saucer in the back yard"
ROYTON STATION
Royton was a terminus station with a single platform. The booking hall was parallel to the platfrom so the buffer stops were up
against the boundary wall. The
track was well above the road level. In 1961 it had 30 passenger and 3 freight
trains each day. The line from Royton Junction was just over one mile long but
very steep. In this short distance there were gradients of 1 in 62, 1 in 71 and
1 in 150. In a remarkable contrast to today, disruption was minimal. The first
replacement bus ran at 7.15am, High Barn St cleared up by 6pm and normal rail
services restarted with the 8.55pm train from Victoria!
AN INSPECTOR CALLS
In a further contrast with roads, all railway accidents
have an independent formal inquiry aimed at finding out what wrong and
recommending improvements. The Royton crash was investigated by Col Robertson of
the Railway Inspectorate, whose report was published on May 5th 1961.
THE FINDINGS
"I am satisfied that the brakes on the train were in
good order. I am also satisfied that if the train and brakes had been properly
handled Driver Pearse would have had no difficulty in stopping the train short
of the buffer stop. Driver Pearse was alone responsible for this accident."
"The approach to Royton is not unsafely steep for
these trains provided they approach it at a reasonable speed and are brought
under control in good time. In my view a driver should have his train fully
under control, with his speed reduced to 30mph, by the time he reaches Turf Lane
bridge. The Railway Officers have agreed to introduce a 30mph speed limit from
this point into Royton station."
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