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Cuba Patriot, Thurs., January 17, 1884
Researched and Submitted by Richard Palmer
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INTO THE FLAMES!
Railway Train on a Track of Fire.
Terrible Accident on the B.,B.& K.
An accident peculiar in its nature and awful in its results occurred on the Bradford, Bordell & Kinzua road Tuesday morning, three miles from Bradford. The train was one which left
Wellsville at 6 o’clock that morning and reached the scene of its dreadful experience about 9. The engineer was patsy Sexton, fireman Michael Walsh, and conductor Frank Townsend in place
of the regular conductor Jack Wallace. The particulars we condense from the account in the Bradford Era.
Situated about 150 feet from the railroad track and above it on the steep hillside was a 250-barrel tank on the Anchor Oil Company’s lease on the Buchanan farm. Oil escaped in some
manner from this tank, ran upon and along the railroad track, between more or less concealed by the snow, it is thought, and made its way, following the track to a distance of nearly 1,000
feet down the grade in considerable quantities.
The engineer came so suddenly upon the oil, if indeed he noticed it in quantities to excite alarm, that he could not stop. The gas immediately caught from the fire in the boiler and the
flames spread along the oily pathway with the rapidity of lightning, so that the train ran through a fiery pathway for several hundred feet, splashing the burning oil upon the cars.
The engineer or fireman did not see the oil until they were right upon it. They heard a dull explosion, and in an instant saw the engine bathed in flames, which threw out an
insupportable heat and shivered the windows of the cab to atoms, and the air scorched their very lungs. Sexton’s first thought was to stop the engine, but seeing that it would be death for
all to halt in that baptism of petroleum flames, ran on until roasting flesh and exquisite agony compelled him to jump off he would live.
With a last despairing effort he reversed the engine, opened the throttle wide and jumped, but not until his hands, as he handled the lever, fairly roasted so that the flesh was
actually dropping from them. Then he leaped into the snow, whence his fireman had preceded him, but the train still sped down a grade of 130 feet to the mile, the drivers, which, though
flying backward. being unable to grip the rails, which were well lubricated with wasted oil. The fire of course instantly destroyed the hose connecting the air brakes on the cars and
rendered them inoperative.
The conductor and a number of the gentlemen passengers were in the baggage car. He ordered the doors at each end to be closed and this action undoubtedly saved the car and its occupants
as the flames could not enter. When all saw their predicament they jumped into the snow and generally escaped without injury.
Language fails, however, to describe the awful state of affairs in the passenger coach. As soon as it entered the blazing pool the windows crashed and tongues of fire eagerly entered
for their prey. In less time than it takes to describe it the car became insupportable to life. Some rushed for the doors, others sought liberty by way of windows, and squeezed madly
through the narrow apertures. The train, from all accounts, was tearing along at a tremendous rate and the flames roared through the car, gaining strength with the impetus given by a down
grade and a brisk breeze.
To jump was like leaping into a solid wall of fire, but gladly did the frightened souls avail themselves of this poor opportunity. Providentially the snow was deep and received all
kindly. It was a but few moments ere the car was cleared of all but three persons, whose poor charred bodies were all that remained of two married ladies and an unfortunate girl. In the
wake of the rushing pyre were victims rolling and tossing in the snow to cool the agony of frightful burns. After running half a mile the engine jumped the track on a reverse curve,
alighting on its back in a ditch and dragging the baggage car almost intact after it. The coach, burned to the level of the tracks, remained partly on the track.
The dead were Mrs. Lewis Jones, of Rew; Miss Katie Moran of Aiken, aged 25; and Mrs. L.C. Fair, of Kinzua Junction, aged 22. Identification of these bodies was rendered possible by some
fragment of dress or jewelry.
Prof. Francis Faught of Tarport was so badly burned that his recovery is doubtful. The engineer was badly burned about the head and face and the skin came off from his right hand like a
glove. The conductor and fireman were both severely burned.
The others more or less injured were W.H. Belknap, Mrs. Black, Geo. Black, Lizzie Black, John Koffer, of Aiken; T.E. Fetzer and F.P. Fletcher, Bolivar; J. Haggerty, Hornellsville; C.C.
Wright, Coleville; Geo. McCartney, Wellsville; Mrs. Thos. Barker, Bordell; K.B. Crane, Bradford; A.N. Carpenter, Little Genesee; G.W. Van, wife and son, Indianapolis; B.C. Early, Andover;
daughter of W.E. Procton, Tarport; Chas. Hudick, express messenger, and Jerry Donovan, brakeman.
Supt. Williams, of the B., B. & K., characterizes Sexton’s act as heroic. He remained at his post until actually roasting alive, did everything he possibly could to save the lives of
his passengers and then saved himself. Upon the skin of his hands, which are now nothing but masses of raw, sensitive flesh, were found the imprints of the levers which noble Pat worked
while suffering unendurable pain in order that he might save human lives. It is gratifying to state that this humble hero will probably regain the use of his hands, through it will be a
long and tedious process.
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New York Times, Wed, January 16, 1884 ENGULFED IN BURNING OIL ______ THE TERRIBLE SITUATION OF A PASSENGER TRAIN. ______ A RAILWAY CUT FLOODED WITH OIL, WHICH TAKES FIRE AND BURNS UP A TRAIN AND SEVERAL PERSONS. Bradford, Penn., Jan. 15. - On of those calamaties peculiar to the oil regions startled the people of Bradford to-day, A passenger train on the Bradford, Bordell and Kinzua
Railroad was totally destroyed by fire. The train which was due in this city from Wellsvlle, N.Y., at 10 o'clock this morning when within three miles of the city ran into a river of oil which had escaped from a bursted tank on the hillside, and running down the show, had
covered the bed of the railroad track for over a half-mile. The grade at that point is very steep, and the oil coursed down its bank as if it were a stream of water. There is a sharp curve close by, and before the engineer knew it his train was passing over the
highly inflammable oil. It ignited from the furnace of the engine, and immediately set the entire train on fire. They followed a scene not easily portrayed. The train, which was made up of a baggage car and ladies' coach, was filled with passengers. So great was the
crush that many went into the baggage car. The terrible heat from the burning river of oil instantly cracked and shattered every window in the car. The flames leaped in through the doors, the windows and through the ventilators. The car wheels splashed through
the burning oil scattering it along the bottom of the cars. There were seas of flames on all sides and death seemed to stare every passenger in the face. Those nearest to the ends of the cars dashed through the doors to be met by hissing flames which, lapping their heads,
faces and hands, left terrible burns behind. The high snow banks which lined the road and came almost to a level with the car windows, afforded the imprisoned passengers a possible means of safety. Men, women and children jumped or were forced through the
windows. The majority fell into the snow and rolled over and over down the steep hillside. All who were in the baggage car escaped with their lives, although several were badly burned. The heat in the engine cab was terrible. The engineer, Patrick Sexton, could see
nothing but flame and smoke ahead of him. When the train entered the oil he thought it would speedily pass through it without great danger, and he pulled the throttle wide open. The burning oil, however, ran faster than the engine, and the wood-work of the cab was
soon in flames. Down the grade, through the heat and flame and smoke, thundered the train. Seeing that he could not run through the flames the engineer reversed his engine, and, with his fireman, Mike Walsh, jumped into the snow. They were terribly burned, but both
managed to walk to the nearest boarding- house, two miles away. The engine and cars were thrown down the embankment. Out of the party of 40 or 50 passengers only 3 lost their lives, and they were ladies. Mrs. L.C. Fair, of Kinzua Junction. was burned beyond
recognition. She had been married two years. Her husband was in the baggage car and was unable to go to her assistance. George McCartney, the train news agent, was badly burned in attempting her rescue. Miss Katie Moran, of Allens, Penn., was burned to a crisp. She
was found hanging outside the coach grasping the window-sill. Mrs. Libias Jones, of Rew City, who was at one time reported dead, escaped with slight injuries, and was able to go home this afternoon. Of the injured, Prof. Faught, Tarport, is not expected to live. Patrick Sexton, the engineer, is terribly burned about the face and arms. W.H.
Belnap, Aiken, jumped from the train and was injured internally. Jerry Denegan, a brakeman, had his hands badly cut. Charles Heidieke, the express messenger, was burned about the hands. Capt. Hoe, of Boston, Mass., was burned about the face and head. G.H. Peabody, of Rochester, N.Y., was burned about the head and face, and his hands were cut. K.H. Craney of Bradford was badly burned about the face and head. F.W. Townsend, the conductor, was badly burned about the face and hands. George McCartney, a newsboy, was terribly burned about the head and hands and is not expected to live. A.N. Carpenter, of Little Genesee, N.Y., had
his head, face and left hand burned. Jerry Haggerty, of Ceres, N.Y. was badly burned about the head. Mrs. Black, daughter and son, of Aiken, were burned about the about the heads and hands. Mrs. Black was the most severely burned. G.V. Van, wife and son, of
Indianapolis, were seriously burned. The boy was badly burned about the face and hands. John Kofoer, of Aiken, was terribly burned about the face and hands. T.P. Fletcher, of Bolivar, N.Y., was badly burned about the
face and head. B.C. Earley, of Andover, N.Y., was burned about the face, head and hands. Maud Proctor, aged 10, jumped through a window and was uninjured. Mrs. Thomas Parker, of Bordell, Penn., threw her 4-yea-old girl out of the window and followed after her and escaped with slight burns and bruises. John Burke, of Dunkirk, N.Y., with his sister, was on the train. His account of the disaster is
as follows: "The train was running at the rate of 15 miles an hour. Suddenly the car became dark. Jets and tongues of flames leaped upon the sides and through the ventilators of the car. The glass cracked with a snap and the heat became unendurable. I knew at once that we
were passing through an oil fire. "Turning to my sister Mary I said 'We are passing through an oil fire; be quiet, it will soon be over.' People began to jump through the windows. On all sides were heard the crashing of the glass and the deafening roar of the
flames. It seemed as if we were all doomed to burn to death. The situation was terrible. Women and children were picked up by strong hands and bodily thrown through the windows. They fared better than the few who dashed through the doors into the ocean of flames which
surged to and fro like huge waves upon the bed of the road. "Those who jumped from the windows landed in great drifts of snow while those who went through the doors had their hands, faces and clothing badly burned. I started down the aisle of the car, but the
heat was so awful that it made my head swim. It was impossible to move. The car swayed to and fro like a ship in a heavy sea. The windows offered the only means of escape , and I told Mary that I must jump through the window. " I then picked up a little girl who was
crying and threw her out the same window. And then I made the jump of my life, landing in a snow-drift. My mustache and my hair were only slightly singed. My sister rolled down the bank, but escaped without a scratch. The only wonder to me is that any of the passengers
scaped with their lives." B.C. Earley, of Andover, N.Y., said to the TIMES correspondent that when the train ran into the burning oil the air became thick and hot. The coach swayed to and fro, the windows cracked, and the car was instantly filled with heat and flame.
It was such a fiery breath that it seemed that all must perish. He jumped from the rear platform and fell on his face in the snow. It was simply impossible for him to render any assistance whatever to others. It was every man for himself. George McCartney, the
newsboy, had a terrible experience. He was frightfully burned about the face and head. The flesh was burned from his hands. He was near the end of the car and jumped from the platform, landing in a pool of fiery oil, where he received his injuries which may prove fatal.
The remains of the victims were brought to this city and placed in the Morgue. This is the first accident in the history of the Bradford, Bordell and Kinzua Railway Company. No blame is attached to the officials, as the disaster was clearly unforesen.
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