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Re: [CBQ] Montgomery.

To: <CBQ@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [CBQ] Montgomery.
From: <sholding@sbcglobal.net>
Date: Thu, 20 Jan 2005 00:15:09 -0600
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My dad took me down the afternoon after it happened and we took movies of the 
aftermath.  What a mess.  Part of the restriction was the mail on the cars.  
Have movies of a wrecker lifting a car up and retrucking it then trundling off 
with it with the CZ going thru the old north main around the wreckage
sjh
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: qrailroadman 
  To: CBQ@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2005 10:43 AM
  Subject: [CBQ] Montgomery.



  The ICC report details the technical events leading up to the 
  wreck.  The personal details of the incident exist only in the minds 
  of those close to the wreck.

  I was notified of the incident by the wife of a Q Engineer with whom 
  we were good friends.  Natural curiosity caused me to drive to 
  Montgomery and "see" what happened.  What I SAW was far beyond what 
  one would expect to "see" at a derailment.  The devastation of the 
  locomotives was so complete that three of us, two other Q Engineers 
  and myself, were, at first, unable to identify what pieces had been 
  the lead unit of the Q train.

  When I arrived at Montgomery the town was FULL of cars and people.  
  I parked near the north end of the Lyon Metal parking lot. On the 
  walk to the wreck site I met the two Engineer's mentioned earlier.  
  We chatted about the events of the day and wondered if anyone was 
  hurt.  Bob, one of the two, was in the C&I pool and was 2 or 3 times 
  out.  Mike, the other Engineer, had marked off to take his wife to 
  the Doctor.  I had tied up early that afternoon and was in no danger 
  of being called.  Bob, Mike and I walked toward Anchor Brush Co. to 
  get a view of the equipment west of the point of impact.

  As we got close to Anchor Brush a Switchman, Jimmy, was comming out 
  of the restricted area that had been created by the police.  Jimmy 
  was on the Lyon Job and his engine and crew were at the wallpaper 
  plant (Western Electric).  They were blocked by the RI train on the 
  branch and couldn't get out.  As Jimmy approached, Bob asked 
  him "how'd the crew make out"?  "They didn't" was the reply.  The 
  three of us couldn't understand how this could be as the "lead" Q E7 
  didn't look all that bad.  Its windshield was smashed in but not to 
  the degree one would expect in a fatal wreck. We mentioned this to 
  Jimmy who told us that the E7 was NOT the lead unit.  The lead unit 
  was on the north side of the main and was UNDER a Rock Island 
  engine.  

  About this time Mike asked Jimmy who the crews were.  George 
  Donaldson was 3's Engineer and George Lincoln was his Fireman.  When 
  the name of the Q Pilot (on the RI engine) was mentioned Mike almost 
  passed out.  When Mike marked off that morning Engineer R L Parker 
  became first-out and, later, took the call to work the Pilot job on 
  the RI detour.  Of the four killed in the collision three were Q men 
  and the other was the RI Engineer.

  As photos show, the cab of the lead RI engine was ripped away from 
  the rest of the carbody and lay several feet west and north of the 
  remains of the locomotive.  With such enormous devastation it's easy 
  to understand how the men in that cab could be killed.  What is not 
  as easily understood is how a Road Foreman of Engines could have 
  been standing in the middle of that same cab at the time of impact 
  and survive.  A long time after the wreck "Mac" told me he was 
  leaning against the electrical cabinet watching 3's headlight 
  approach.  All of a sudden the headlight "went crazy" and the next 
  thing he knew he was on the ground covered with blankets.  One never 
  knows.

  No. three was reported to be going 56 MPH when she went through the 
  switch and headed down the branch toward the RI train.  Appearantly, 
  3's engines made it through the switch without tipping over and hit 
  the lead RI engine standing up.  The lead truck of 3's lead unit 
  ended up on top of the RI engine that lost its cab.

  As all this was happening a westward RI detour train was standing on 
  main 1 behind a red signal waiting for things to clear so he could 
  start down the branch.  That didn't happen.

  Karl





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