By
August Hutchinson
Passenger cars and the
people inside were, like bridges, prone to fire damage thanks to coal-fired
stoves. It was also perceived at the time that the open-flame candles and oil
lights were huge problems (it turns out that while they did sometimes cause or
fuel fires, they weren’t as dangerous as the stoves because the impact of many
crashes put out their flames). Newspapers were relentless in criticizing these
heating and lighting systems in the cars, as exemplified by a scathing 1886 New
York Times editorial about a contemporary crash: “the heat was soon so intense
that no one could stand within 100 feet of the cars, and so fierce that in less
than ten minutes the miserable occupants had been burned beyond
recognition...If there had been no coal stove there would have been no fire,
and if there had been no fire many lives that were lost could have been saved.
There is nothing new about this accident. In many other railroad collisions and
wrecks the coal stove has had its victims, and in nearly all cases of the kind
the number of its victims has exceeded the number of those who were fatally
injured or killed by the shock...The coal stove and the kerosene lamp should be
excluded by law from railroad passenger cars...The passenger car of to-day is a
tinder box. Highly seasoned wood, with oil and varnish, make it as [flammable]
as a bundle of kindlings soaked in benzine...Public opinion demands safety. It
is the companies that demand the dangerous lamps and stoves because they are
cheaper than other safe appliances...The Directors should for a time turn their
attention from the stock market to this subject.”
This Massachusetts Crash had a death-toll of thirty-two. It would have been lower without the resulting fire, blamed by officials on the kerosene lamps. |
Most critics clamored
for steam heating to replace the coal-fired stoves, but the railroad companies
were hesitant. Replacing the systems would be costly. Plus, they were faced
with a slew of technical questions that needed to be answered before they could
install the steam systems: How would the system deal with condensation? Would
the steam come from the engine, which could reduce power significantly, or from
an independent source that would be installed? What would it add to the fuel
bill? Was it effective enough in very cold weather?
Most of these questions
were eventually answered through research by railroad companies, manufacturers,
and independent groups, and the results were distributed widely. Railroads were
also helped by enthusiastic inventors - most well-publicized railroad fires
were followed by spikes in patent grants for heating systems. In some states in
the late eighties/early nineties, like Massachusetts and Maryland, the common
stove was to be banned and after a certain point, all cars were to be steam
heated.
“The
Modern Altar Of Sacrifice - The Devouring Car Stove” reads the caption of this cartoon from the era. |
Even though the vast
majority of cars were coal heated at the time of the 1876 Ashtabula crash,
fifteen years later, ~29% of them were
equipped with steam heaters and about ~27% had water heaters. So less than half
were equipped with coal stoves by that time. And most of the cars that were
still heated by stoves were on lightly-travelled railroad lines. Most of the
new technology, by contrast, was employed on the highly frequented lines,
meaning that alternate heating systems warmed many more passenger miles than
coal did. Pintsch gas lighting was adopted on many lines as well. It was safer
than previous lighting systems and advertised as such, but it still very
capable of adding fuel to a fire, like it did in the 1892 Thirsk crash in
England.
Other safety advances
came to passenger cars in the latter 1800s. The B&O would brag in 1898
about how its Pintsch-lit Royal Blue cars, which were much more metallic than
the older cars and thus much less flammable, “are not only vestibuled [which
allowed safe transit between rail cars], but...are further protected by
Pullman’s Anti-Telescoping device, an invention that effectually prevents the
crushing of the cars in case of collision.”
Anti-Telescoping Devices aimed to prevent cars from being crushed together like this. |
Fires aside, collisions
and derailments were greatest causes of passenger injury and death. From 1890
through 1900, even with the proliferation of safer passenger cars, collisions
annually, on average, killed ~69 and injured ~775 passengers. In that same
decade, derailments annually, on average, killed ~31 and injured ~672
passengers.
Come
back next Monday for A Dangerous Ride - Installment Seven, and you’ll learn about the dangerous lives
led by trainmen, fraught with negligence, confusion, abuse, and of course
explosions.
Write
to August at write2hutchinson@aol.com
There is nothing new about this accident. In many other railroad collisions and wrecks the coal stove has had its victims.
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