The Deadliest Train Derailments In World History
2004 Sri Lanka Tsunami
Date: December, 26, 2004
Location: Telwatta, Sri Lanka
Casualties: Estimated 1,700
Cause: Tsunami waves
A train named Queen of the Sea left Sri Lanka's Colombo Fort Station on December 26, 2004. The train was two hours into its trip to Galle when tragedy struck. A tsunami blasted through the trees as Queen of the Sea traveled through Telwatta.
There were an estimated 1,500 paying passengers on board based on ticket sales, plus an estimated 200 people who had snuck aboard at various stops. There were only a few survivors and many bodies were never recovered or identified.
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1981 Bihar Derailment
Date: June 6, 1981
Location: Bihar, India
Casualties: 250 confirmed, but an estimated 800 killed
Cause: Wet rails and/or a cow
The cause of this train derailment in Bihar, India remains a mystery as there are conflicting accounts. Inclement weather was battering the region, causing some sources to speculate that a cyclone blew the train from the tracks. Other sources cite wet rails and the conductor's decision to brake in order to avoid a cow that had wandered onto the tracks as the cause of the accident. Whatever the reason, the train was carrying around 1,000 passengers when it plunged into the Bihar River, injuring more than 100 of them and killing somewhere between 600 and 800 people, making it one of the worst railway disasters in India.
1917 Ciurea Station, Romania
Date: January 13, 1917
Location: Ciurea, Romania
Casualties: Estimated 1,000
Cause: Unknown, but possibly brake damage from overcrowding
Due to a lack of investigation into the accident because of wartime secrecy, no one knows what precisely caused this derailment or the final death toll. Romania had just entered the war on the side of the Allied Powers and both Romanian citizens and Russian soldiers boarded a train to escape the advancing German army. It was believed that the train was overloaded - a regular occurrence during World War I - and that the extra weight damaged the brakes from passengers stepping on them. The train derailed, crashed, and caught fire after allegedly speeding up during a descent and failing to brake.
- Photo:
- Florian Pépellin
- Wikimedia Commons
- CC-BY-SA 4.0
1917 Saint-Michel-de-Maurienne Derailment
Date: December 12, 1917
Location: Modane, France
Casualties: Over 700
Cause: Excessive speed, over capacity, brake failure
French troops were were traveling home during World War I from Italy when the accident occurred. Due to a locomotive shortage at the time, two trains were combined into one 19-car train, powered by a single engine. While traveling at a high speed, the brakes on the train stopped working while traveling into a valley. The train derailed and caught fire, killing most of the soldiers onboard.
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1915 Carranza's Military Train
Date: January 22, 1915
Location: Guadalajara, Mexico
Casualties: Estimated 600
Cause: Loss of control
The families of soldiers fighting in the Mexican Revolution were loaded into a train in Colima, Mexico. President Venustiano Carranza had ordered them transferred to Guadalajara due to the war. Per president Carranza's wishes, a 20-car train was filled well beyond its safe capacity. Reportedly there were travelers hanging from the roof and the bottom of the train. The train began a steep descent during the journey and the conductor was unable to control it as it plunged into a ravine.
1989 Ufa Train Disaster
Date: June 4, 1989
Location: Ural Mountains, Soviet Union
Casualties: 575
Cause: Natural gas explosion
In a strange convergence of events, a natural gas pipeline caused two passenger trains to explode off of the tracks. The pipeline had unusually low pressure, but pipeline workers chose to add more gas into the situation instead of shutting off the line and finding the leak. The natural gas gathered on the train tracks and ignited when the two trains created a spark as they passed. The explosion derailed several cars from each train and damaged the surrounding forests, with much foliage being completely incinerated.
Windows in a nearby town shattered, trees were incinerated, and hundreds of passengers traveling died while many others suffered severe burns. Helicopters were used to move victims to the hospital for treatment. An estimated 575 victims lost their lies, but most bodies were hardly recognizable. An official death count has never been verified.