Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Dagenham East rail crash

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Time
  
19:34

Country
  
England

Date
  
30 January 1958

Injuries
  
89

Location
  
Dagenham East

Passengers
  
~1,000

Total number of deaths
  
10

Trains
  
2

Dagenham East rail crash

Rail line
  
LT&SR (BR Eastern Region)

Cause
  
Signal passed at danger

Similar
  
Ilford rail crash, Wembley Central rail crash, Spa Road Junction rail crash, Ealing rail crash, Cannon Street station rai

The Dagenham East rail crash was a railway accident on the London, Tilbury and Southend Railway line of British Railways which occurred at Dagenham, United Kingdom.

The accident took place at around 19:34 on 30 January 1958 and was a rear-end collision of two late-running trains. Conditions at Dagenham East station were foggy at the time. The accident occurred after one train had passed a signal indicating danger due to a driver error. Ten passengers were killed in the accident and 89 injured. Four members of railway staff were also injured.

The trains involved were the LMS 2-6-4 tank engine hauled 18:20 Fenchurch Street to Shoeburyness and the BR standard 2-6-4 tank hauled 18:35 Fenchurch Street to Thorpe Bay. Each train consisted of 11 coaches with approximately 500 passengers. The 18:35 train ploughed into the back of the 18:20 departure which demolished three carriages and derailed several others. The locomotive of the 18:35 train and leading carriage were derailed. Some wreckage blocked the adjacent London Underground line but did not cause any further accidents.

One of the locomotives involved in this accident (80079) survives today at the Severn Valley Railway.

References

Dagenham East rail crash Wikipedia