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the express could be applied by the train crew. The express had slowed to 10 miles per hour (16 km/h) on impact, but even this low speed was sufficient to cause significant damage to the
Beverly accommodation. The express train's engine telescoped about two thirds of its length into the rear passenger car. The impact knocked fittings off the boiler, allowing live steam to fill the remains of the carriage. The carriage then took fire from split kerosene (from the lanterns) and firebox of the locomotive. The official report states that 29 people were killed, all in the rear car, and 57 were injured in the train. Some passengers that were trapped in the splintered rear coaches were burned alive. Bystanders from the station and surviving passengers attempted to rescue trapped victims by tearing parts of the roof off the coaches, but their effort was unsuccessful as fire quickly engulfed the shattered timbers.
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aware of the location of the other train. On the straight approaching Revere, a passenger on the rear platform of the accommodation could see the headlight of the express behind him, but mist and the poor tail lamps meant that it was not possible for the engineer of the express to see the rear of the
Beverly accommodation. Approaching Revere, the attention of the engineer of the express was focused upwards on a signal that would inform him whether the switches were set for the East Boston branch, not along the track.
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inbound train was due. At this time the inbound branch train had not even departed from the other end of the branch at Lynn. It had written instructions to wait to connect with an extra (special train) coming from the
Ashbury Grove revival meeting. The extra, however, was very late as it had earlier broken a coupling between the carriages. The inbound Saugus branch train eventually departed Lynn at 7.30 pm and arrived at Everett Junction at 8.10 pm.
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The railroad was condemned by the public for their conservative management, old fashioned equipment, not having the
Westinghouse air brakes on their locomotives and their insistence on using the old time-interval system and not using the telegraph. Several lawsuits were filed against the Eastern and
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left the main line at
Everett Junction, just north of the Mystic River. When the first Saugus branch train arrived at Everett Junction, it could not proceed any further as an inbound branch line train was due and there was a specific rule prohibiting an outbound train from entering the branch when an
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The two train crews became aware of the other train when they were about 800 yards apart. The
Engineer of the express whistled for brakes (neither of the trains was fitted with continuous brakes), reversed his engine, and jumped clear. The warning time was so short, however, that only two brakes on
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The engineer of the express had, indeed, been verbally warned at Boston by the depot master "to look out for other trains". Upon being stopped at
Everett Junction behind the second Saugus branch train, the engineer assumed this was the train he had been warned about and thought the line in front of
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With the arrival of the inbound Saugus branch train, the outbound Saugus branch train could finally clear the main line. This allowed the
Beverly accommodation to depart on the main line (the light engine had been coupled to the accommodation). While this was happening, the Portland express arrived
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By this time a queue of trains had built up at
Everett Junction on the outbound line: the first Saugus branch train; a light locomotive for Salem; the Beverly accommodation; and the second Saugus branch train. Normally blockages at Everett Junction due to an outbound Saugus branch train waiting for
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Four trains were scheduled to depart from the Boston terminus after 6.30 pm: a Saugus branch line train at 6.30 pm; a second Saugus branch train at 7.00 pm; a
Beverly accommodation train (which stopped all stations) at 7.15 pm; and the Portland Express at 8.00 pm. Due to the dislocation of services
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The two trains, the Beverly accommodation and the Portland express, departed Everett Junction not more than five minutes apart. At Chelsea, the station agent noted that the trains were unusually close together, but failed to warn the engineer of the express as he felt the two train crews would be
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The conductor of the Beverly accommodation had been reluctant to leave Boston so close in advance of the Portland express, but had been reassured by the Superintendent that the engineer of the express would be warned that the Beverly accommodation was running late. The conductor was under the
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all four trains departed late: the first Saugus train around 7 pm; the Beverly accommodation at 7.40 pm; the second Saugus train at 7.53 pm and the Express at 8.05 pm. The second Saugus train departed after the Beverly accommodation due to difficulty in getting a train crew.
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an inbound train were avoided by the employee stationed there shunting the outbound train on to the branch or the inbound main line under flag protection. However, the regular employee was sick and his replacement simply left the trains on the main line.
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impression that the train behind him in the queue at Everett Junction was the Portland express, and hence believed that the engineer would be well aware that the Beverly accommodation was running immediately in advance of him.
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At this point there was considerable confusion on the part of the Conductor of the Beverly accommodation and the Engineer of the Portland express as to the location and identity of each other's train.
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Woodcut of the Revere station, made shortly after the accident, looking towards Boston. The two lines on the right are the double track main line, and the line on the left is the branch to East Boston.
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at Everett Junction and was stopped behind the second Saugus branch train. Once the second branch train had cleared the main line, the Portland express was allowed to depart.
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The following description of the accident is based on that of the official report of the Massachusetts Railroad Commission, with additional detail from additional sources.
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causing heavier than usual traffic on the railroads, especially on the Eastern Railroad's line. Normally, the Eastern ran 152 trains on weekend days, but with two large
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The heavy traffic and the Eastern's management's conservative style of not using the telegraph to dispatch trains, led to long delays along the line.
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and military muster taking place, the number of trains running to accommodate the extra load of passengers was increased to 192.
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The accident occurred on a very busy Saturday evening with three large weekend events taking place outside
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After the accident some Bostonians accused the Eastern Railroad of deliberately murdering the passengers.
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the company almost went bankrupt. This eventually led to the Eastern being merged with its rival, the
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268:"Frightful Casualty. A Concentration of Horrors. Collision on a Railway Near Boston"
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A History of Railroad Accidents, Safety Precautions and Operating Practices
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The Rail Lines of Southern New England - A Handbook of Railroad History
318:"Annual report of the Board of Railroad Commissioners. v. 3 (1871)"
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Accidents and incidents involving Eastern Railroad (Massachusetts)
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Train Wrecks - A Pictorial History of Accidents on the Main Line
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The New York Herald August 30, 1871 page 10 lists 30 fatalities
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274:. September 2, 1871. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
432:"search results containing "Revere OR OR TRAIN OR WRECK""
299:. August 30, 1871. p. 2 – via Newspapers.com.
249:. August 27, 1871. p. 1 – via Newspapers.com.
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occurred on the evening of August 26, 1871, when the
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117:slammed into the rear of a stopped local train at
384:. New York: G.P. Putnum's Sons. pp. 125â144.
646:Railway accidents and incidents in Massachusetts
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396:"Eastern Railroad Revere Train Wreck, 1871"
231:The New York Herald August 30, 1871 page 10
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436:Library of Congress: Chronicling America
661:Events in Suffolk County, Massachusetts
369:. Val-Ballou Press Inc. pp. 77â81.
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16:1871 railroad accident in Massachusetts
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414:"Revere, MA Train Collision, Aug 1871"
354:. The Essex Institute. pp. 71â78.
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107:The Great Revere train wreck of 1871
449:Holbrook, Stewart H. (April 1957).
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380:Adams, Charles Francis Jr (1879).
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451:"The Great Rail Wreck At Revere"
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494:. New York: Bonanza Books.
382:Notes on Railroad Accidents
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457:. Vol. 8, no. 3.
641:Railway accidents in 1871
617:42.4055139°N 71.0036889°W
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565:Revere, Massachusetts, US
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539:Railway accidents in 1871
350:Bradlee, Francis (1917).
272:The Pittsburgh Commercial
201:Boston and Maine Railroad
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486:Reed, Robert C. (1968).
467:Karr, Ronald D. (1995).
622:42.4055139; -71.0036889
330:2027/nyp.33433057105367
656:Revere, Massachusetts
651:1871 in Massachusetts
471:. Branch Line Press.
365:Shaw, Robert (1978).
119:Revere, Massachusetts
58:Revere, Massachusetts
352:The Eastern Railroad
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293:"Railway Slaughter"
243:"Death on the Rail"
671:August 1871 events
157:Saugus branch line
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455:American Heritage
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567:(26 August)
335:February 4,
635:Categories
322:HathiTrust
207:References
125:Background
84:Statistics
203:in 1884.
191:Aftermath
561:(13 May)
144:Accident
54:Location
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97:Injured
64:Country
41:Details
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89:Deaths
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