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His Majesty's Railway Inspectorate

Established in 1840, His Majesty's Railway Inspectorate (HMRI) is the organisation responsible for overseeing safety on Britain's railways and tramways. It was previously a separate non-departmental public body, but from 1990 to April 2006 it was part of the Health and Safety Executive. It was then transferred to the Office of Rail and Road and ceased to exist by that name in May 2009 when it was renamed the Safety Directorate. However, in summer 2015 its name was re-established as the safety arm of ORR.[1][failed verification]

His Majesty's Railway Inspectorate
Non-ministerial government department overview
Formed1840
Superseding agency
JurisdictionGreat Britain
Headquarters1 Kemble Street, London, WC2B 4AN
Non-ministerial government department executive
  • Ian Prosser, HM Chief Inspector of Railways
Websitewww.orr.gov.uk

Modern HMRI inspectorate edit

The modern HMRI within the Office of Road and Rail (ORR) identifies as "The Railway Inspectorate".[citation needed] HMRI works in tandem with the rest of the ORR, and as such may be consulted on matters effecting industry efficiency.

Internally, most of HMRI's inspectors are part of the Railway Safety Directorate (RSD) of the ORR, although some Railway Performance and Planning (RPP) engineers have some more limited powers as warranted HMRI individuals.

HMRI's role and powers largely mirror the HSE which is the safety regulator in other non-railway industries. HMRI has powers to enter a railway under section 20 of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. It also issues licensing and drivers' licences under the Railways and Other Guided Transport Systems (Safety) Regulations 2006 (ROGS).

HMRI's individuals are drawn from within industry and experienced HSE inspectors. Commonly, individuals are professional engineers or time-served safety professionals. All inspectors are issued a warrant by the chief inspector to that effect. Normally an inspector will use the industry Personal Track Safety (PTS) card. However, inspectors have the right, in reasonable circumstances, not to do so.[citation needed]

History edit

First fifty years edit

Establishment edit

The body originated in 1840, as a result of the Railway Regulation Act 1840 ('Lord Seymour's Act'), when Inspecting Officers of Railways were first appointed by the Board of Trade (BoT).[2]

Britain's railways at that time were private companies; the 1840 Act required them to report to the BoT all accidents which had caused personal injury:[3] it also gave the inspectorate powers to inspect any railway, and hence from its formation the inspectorate was used to investigate serious railway accidents and report upon them to the BoT.

Inspection of new lines edit

They were tasked with inspecting new lines, and commenting on their suitability for carrying passenger traffic.

However, the inspectorate had no powers to require changes until the Railway Regulation Act 1842 ('An Act for the better Regulation of Railways and for the Conveyance of Troops') gave the BoT powers to delay opening of new lines if the inspectorate was concerned about "Incompleteness of the Works or permanent Way, or the Insufficiency of the Establishment" for working the line.[4]

Crash investigation edit

Their first investigation was of the Howden rail crash on 7 August 1840,[2] which had killed five passengers (although the inspector's report said four, three passengers were killed instantly, two dying later of their injuries)[5] as a result of the derailment of a train caused by the fall of a large casting from a wagon on a passenger train.[2]

The inspectorate's reports of their accident investigations were made to the BoT alone, but eventually published as part of the BoT's annual report to Parliament.[6]

Competence edit

Until the late 1960s HMRI's inspecting officers were all recruited from the Corps of Royal Engineers. In the early years of the inspectorate, their competence to adjudicate on civil engineering structures was questioned by critics, sometimes with good reason.

A reorganisation of the inspectorate in November 1846 abolished the post of inspector-general, and led to the departure of Major-General Charles Pasley, the incumbent, and one of his subordinates.

Pasley had come under criticism[7] after the bridges and earthworks of the North British Railway's line from Edinburgh to Berwick – approved by Pasley in June 1846[8] – failed to withstand heavy rain in September 1846, with nineteen miles of track being rendered unusable.[9] Temporary works were undertaken to restore a service, Pasley approved them (orally),[10] but some of the new work then proved faulty.[11]

In 1849 the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway's Torksey viaduct across the River Trent was not initially accepted by the railway inspector Lintorn Simmons[12] because he was unhappy with its novel (tubular girder) design by John Fowler.

This decision (and also the basic premise that a bridge designed by a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) which had passed all practical tests could be rejected by a railway inspector because he was uncomfortable with its novel design) was criticised by the ICE:

"The subject has been discussed in the Institution of Civil Engineers, and every eminent engineer was of the opinion that the Government inspector was clearly wrong".

Threatened with a call for a parliamentary enquiry should approval continue to be withheld, the inspectorate reconsidered and approved the bridge un-modified.[13]

Subsequently, and consequently, the BoT took the view that (as it explained in defending itself from criticism that the defects in the Tay Bridge should have been seen and acted upon by the inspectorate):

"The duty of an inspecting officer, so far as regards design, is to see that the construction is not such as to transgress those rules and precautions which practice and experience have proved to be necessary for safety. If he were to go beyond this, or if he were to make himself responsible for every novel design, and if he were to attempt to introduce new rules and practices not accepted by the profession, he would be removing from the civil engineer, and taking upon himself a responsibility not committed to him by Parliament."[14]

Critics at the end of the 1850s also noted that during the Crimean War, the Grand Crimean Central Railway had been built to forward supplies from Balaclava to British siege lines not by the Royal Engineers, but by a consortium of civilian railway contractors. If the government turned to civilians as best fitted to build a military railway, was it not anomalous that it thought military engineers best fitted to inspect new railway lines?[15]

Extension and formalisation of powers edit

The inspectorate's powers were extended and formalised by the Railway Regulation Act 1871 ('An Act to amend the Law respecting the Inspection and Regulation of Railways'). Paragraph 4 extended the power to inspect to give inspectors explicit powers to require the production of persons and papers by a company being inspected. Paragraph 5 meant new works on existing lines were liable to the same inspection regime as new lines. The BoT could now set up a formal court of inquiry to investigate an accident, taking evidence on oath in public hearings. Inspectors investigating an accident were now required to make a formal report to the BoT, which was now empowered to publish reports (from an inspector or from a court of inquiry) directly.[16]

Subsequent public inquiries under the new powers included those into the Shipton-on-Cherwell train crash in 1874 (chaired by an inspector William Yolland), and into the Tay Bridge disaster of 1879. However, the procedure fell into abeyance after the failure of the three-man board (of which Yolland, by now chief inspecting officer, was a member) of the Tay Bridge inquiry to arrive at an agreed report.

For many years in the mid-19th century the Railway Inspectorate advocated in its accident returns and otherwise three safety measures it saw as vital to ensure passenger safety:

  • "lock" Interlocking of points and signals, so that conflicting signal indications are prevented;
  • "block" A space-interval or absolute block system of signalling, where one train is not allowed to enter a physical section until the preceding one had left it; and
  • "brake" Continuous brakes, to put at the command of the engine driver adequate braking power; this requirement being increased as the technology made it reasonable to 'automatic' (in modern parlance 'fail-safe') continuous brakes which had to be 'held off' by vacuum or compressed air and would be applied automatically if that supply was lost (e.g. if a train were divided).

The Board of Trade got as far and as fast as it could by persuasion, but had no powers to enforce its views on often reluctant railway managements of existing lines.

Inspectors disagreed as to whether the board should be given powers to require changes. Yolland's official report on an 1867 accident (in which eight people died at a junction unaltered since an 1862 fatal accident, despite an inspector having urged improvements) pressed for such powers:

Their Lordships have no control whatever over railways after they are once opened for traffic, however defective and dangerous the structures and permanent way may be, and however imperfectly the construction of junctions and the laying out of altered station yards may provide for the public safety.

It is true that the practice of the Department is to send one of the inspecting officers to inquire into and report upon the circumstances attending accidents, as in this and the former collision at Walton Junction, and such inquiries are submitted to by the railway companies; but their Lordships are not empowered to make an order for anything to be done.

No responsibility appears to attach to any person for the complete neglect exhibited towards Captain Tyler's recommendations; and the unfortunate signalman of thirty years' service, who was, I have no doubt, as he thought, doing his duty properly, is the only person to whom any liability attaches; whereas the expenditure of a small sum would have prevented him from inadvertently committing the act for which he will shortly be tried for manslaughter, and have saved the railway company a very large sum of money that must now be paid as compensation for those who suffered.

The utility of their Lordships continuing to maintain the present system of making these unauthorized inquiries into the circumstances connected with the accidents which occur on railways may therefore be fairly questioned as a stronger instance of its inutility cannot be cited than what has recently occurred with reference to the Walton junction. [17]

Tyler himself supported the view taken by successive governments: that to take such powers would remove the clarity of existing arrangements, where responsibility for passenger safety lay with the railway companies alone.[18]

The death of 80 people on a Sunday school outing in the Armagh rail disaster of 1889 brought a reversal of this policy on the three key issues: within two months of the accident Parliament had enacted the Regulation of Railways Act 1889, which authorised the Board of Trade to require the use of continuous automatic brakes on passenger railways, along with the block system of signalling and the interlocking of all points and signals. This is often taken as the beginning of the modern era in UK rail safety: "the old happy-go-lucky days of railway working" came to an end.[19]

Modern era edit

The chief inspecting officer from 1916 to 1929 was Colonel John Wallace Pringle, responsible for investigating many accidents. It was during his tenure, in 1919, that the office became part of the newly created Ministry of Transport.[20]

The last chief inspecting officer with a Royal Engineers background, Major Rose, retired in 1988 and he was replaced by an appointee from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).[21][page needed]

Since then, inspecting officers have been recruited from the HSE or as mid-career railway employees from the former British Rail.

List of chief inspecting officers / HM Chief Inspectors of Railways edit

Chief inspecting officer Dates
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir John Mark Frederic Smith 1840–1841
Major-General Charles Pasley 1840–1846
Post disappeared as a result of reorganisation in November 1846: there were two inspectors, neither designated as chief (and neither Pasley)[22]
Captain Henry Whatley Tyler 1870–1877
Lt-Col William Yolland 1877–1885
Col. Frederick Henry Rich 1885–1889
Major General Charles Scrope Hutchinson 1892–1895
Major Sir Francis Arthur Marindin 1895–1899
Lt-Col. Sir Horatio Arthur Yorke 1900–1913
Lt-Col Pelham George Von Donop 1913–1916
Major Sir John Wallace Pringle 1916–1929
Lt-Col Sir Alan Henry Lawrence Mount 1929–1949
Lt-Col George Robert Stewart Wilson 1949–1957
Brigadier Charles Ardagh Langley 1958–1963
Colonel Denis McMullen 1963–1968
Col. John Richard Hugh Robertson 1969–1973
Lt-Col. Ian Kenneth Arnold McNaughton 1974–1982
Major Charles Frederick Rose 1982–1988
Robin J. Seymour 1988–1993
Stanley S. J. Robertson 1993–1998
Vic Coleman 1998–2002
Dr. Allan Sefton acting head until November 2002
Alan Osborne November 2002–October 2003[23]
Dr. Allan Sefton October 2003–December 2005
Linda Williams December 2005–September 2008
Ian Prosser September 2008–2024
Richard Hines 2024–

Original twin functions of the HMRI edit

The function of HMRI was to inspect and approve all new (or modified) railway works and to investigate railway accidents.

Accident investigations were inquisitorial, generally not open to the public, and aimed to determine the causes behind the accident (both the immediate cause and contributory factors) and to make recommendations to avoid re-occurrence. Until the 1860s, in the first instance, accident reports were internal and only published in the accident returns made from time to time by the Board of Trade to Parliament. For fatal accidents, a coroner's inquest would also be held, which inspectors might attend to hear the evidence, to assist the coroner, or to give evidence themselves of what their investigation had found.[a] In the absence of input from the inspectorate, inquests rarely went beyond the immediate cause; hence, said one inspector in 1870:

"Coroner's inquests, as generally conducted, are singularly ill calculated to ascertain the real causes of railway accidents; but they are supposed to be sometimes serviceable... to the railway companies, in concealing the mismanagement of the company from the public".[24]

Coroner's inquests were public and their proceedings and verdicts widely reported in the press.

In later years, accident reports were published directly, widely circulated within the railway industry, and reported upon by the press.

Recent history edit

The HMRI became part of the Department of Transport and remained so until 1990, when it was transferred to the Health and Safety Executive (HSE). About this time HMRI expanded its scope and recruited additional staff, Railway Employment Officers. It was their job to monitor the workplace safety and health of railway employees.

After the move to the HSE, (newsworthy) train crash investigations tended to be held as public inquiries presided over by a High Court judge; and the findings published. These inquiries tended to be more adversarial; with the aim of identifying the guilty parties. In some cases criminal prosecution of these parties has occurred in parallel with the public inquiry, delaying the inquiry until the criminal prosecutions have been completed.

The transfer to the HSE was unpopular with many in the industry[why?], and as part of its rail review in 2004 the government announced that the Railway Inspectorate would be transferred from the HSE to merge with the Office of Rail Regulation (now the Office of Rail and Road). The transfer took place on 2 April 2006.

The inspectorate oversaw both operational safety and the initial integrity of new and modified works. As a result of the legislative change, which transferred them to the Office of Rail Regulation, the scope of HMRI enforcement no longer covered guided bus, trolleybus and most cable-hauled transport systems.

In May 2009 the legal entity known as "HM Railway Inspectorate" ceased to exist when a single rail regulatory body covering both safety and economic issues, the Safety Directorate, was created, but the 180 individual inspectors will continue to be known as His Majesty's Railway Inspectors.[25]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For an example of this twin-track procedure, see Evening Standard (1860, p. 3)

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Minutes of the 99th RIHSAC Meeting Tuesday 9 June 2015" (PDF). Office of Rail Regulation. 2015-06-09. Retrieved 2019-02-05.
  2. ^ a b c Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 18.
  3. ^ Railway Regulation Act 1840.
  4. ^ Railway Regulation Act 1842.
  5. ^ York Herald 1840, p. 4.
  6. ^ The Scotsman 1841, p. 2.
  7. ^ Morning Post 1846, p. 3.
  8. ^ Caledonian Mercury 1846, p. 3.
  9. ^ Thomas 1969, pp. 32–33.
  10. ^ York Herald 1846, p. 3.
  11. ^ Carlisle Journal 1846, p. 3.
  12. ^ Mackay 2013, p. 95.
  13. ^ Sheffield Independent 1850, p. 5.
  14. ^ Dundee Courier 1880, p. 3.
  15. ^ Hansard 1857, Columns 1122–1176.
  16. ^ Railway Regulation Act 1871.
  17. ^ Yolland 1867.
  18. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, pp. 18–20.
  19. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 163.
  20. ^ "Sir John Wallace Pringle" (PDF). Proceedings. Institution of Railway Signal Engineers: 13. September 1938. Retrieved 2011-07-10.[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ Hall 1990.
  22. ^ Hansard 1847, Column 324.
  23. ^ "Parliament Transport Select Committee evidence".
  24. ^ Rolt & Kichenside 1982, p. 62.
  25. ^ Haigh 2009, p. 10.

References edit

  • "Chapter 97". Railway Regulation Act. National Archive. 1840. Regnal years 3–4 Victoria. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
  • "Chapter 55". Railway Regulation Act. National Archive. 1842. Regnal years 5–6 Victoria. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
  • "Chapter 78". Railway Regulation Act. National Archive. 1871. Regnal years 34–35 Victoria. Retrieved 2018-01-20.
  • Haigh, Philip (3–16 June 2009). "Farewell HMRI as ORR introduces Safety Directorate". Rail Magazine. No. 619. Peterborough: Bauer Media.
  • Hall, Stanley (1990). Railway Detectives: The 150-year Saga of the Railway Inspectorate. Shepperton: Ian Allan Ltd. ISBN 0-7110-1929-0.
  • "Inspectors of Railways". House of Commons Debates. Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 91. 1847-03-23.
  • "Board of Trade - Select Committee Moved For". House of Commons Debates. Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 145. 1857-06-04. speaker at columns 1136–1138 is repeating criticisms by George Parker Bidder
  • Mackay, Thomas (2013-04-18). The Life of Sir John Fowler, Engineer. Cambridge University Press. pp. 95–104. ISBN 978-1-108-05767-7.: pages cited give the affair plus Fowler's subsequent views
  • Rolt, L. T. C.; Kichenside, Geoffrey (1982). Red for Danger: A History of Railway Accidents and Railway Safety (4th ed.). Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8362-0.
  • Thomas, John (1969). The North British Railway, volume 1. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4697-0.
  • Yolland, W (1867-07-30). "Accident Returns: Extract for the Accident at Walton Junction on 29th June 1867". Railways Archive. Board of Trade. Retrieved 2018-01-21.
  • "Opening of the North British Railway". Caledonian Mercury. 1846-06-22.
  • "The North British Railway". Carlisle Journal. 1846-11-07.
  • "Report by the Board of Trade". Dundee Courier. 1880-07-23.
  • "The Helmshore Railway Calamity". Evening Standard. London. 1860-09-13.
  • "The Use of General Pasley". Morning Post. 1846-11-10.
  • "Reports on Railway Accidents". The Scotsman. 1841-04-01.
  • "Torksey Bridge". Sheffield Independent. 1850-04-13.
  • "The Awfully Fatal Accident on the Hull and Selby Railway". York Herald. 1840-08-15.
  • "North British Railway". York Herald. 1846-11-07.

Further reading edit

  • Hutter, Bridget M. (1997). Compliance: Regulation and Environment. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-826475-5.
  • Hutter, Bridget M. (2001). Regulation and Risk: Occupational Health and Safety on the Railways. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-924250-X.
  • Rolt, L. T. C. (1955). Red for Danger: A History of Railway Accidents. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head Ltd.
  • Lewis, Peter R. (2007). Disaster on the Dee: Robert Stephenson's Nemesis of 1847. Tempus. Describes many key investigations made by the Inspectorate.
  • Lewis, Peter R. (2008). Wheels to Disaster: the Oxford train wreck of Christmas Eve, 1874. The History Press. Describes the early history of the Inspectorate.

External links edit

  • Rail Accident Investigation Branch - Current investigatory body for rail accidents in the UK
  • Railways Archive - Accident Archive - contains facsimiles of reports of many HMRI accident investigations (accident returns for older investigations, accident reports more recently).

majesty, railway, inspectorate, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, js. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources His Majesty s Railway Inspectorate news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Established in 1840 His Majesty s Railway Inspectorate HMRI is the organisation responsible for overseeing safety on Britain s railways and tramways It was previously a separate non departmental public body but from 1990 to April 2006 it was part of the Health and Safety Executive It was then transferred to the Office of Rail and Road and ceased to exist by that name in May 2009 when it was renamed the Safety Directorate However in summer 2015 its name was re established as the safety arm of ORR 1 failed verification His Majesty s Railway InspectorateNon ministerial government department overviewFormed1840Superseding agencyOffice of Rail and RoadJurisdictionGreat BritainHeadquarters1 Kemble Street London WC2B 4ANNon ministerial government department executiveIan Prosser HM Chief Inspector of RailwaysWebsitewww wbr orr wbr gov wbr uk Contents 1 Modern HMRI inspectorate 2 History 2 1 First fifty years 2 1 1 Establishment 2 1 2 Inspection of new lines 2 1 3 Crash investigation 2 1 4 Competence 2 1 5 Extension and formalisation of powers 2 2 Modern era 2 3 List of chief inspecting officers HM Chief Inspectors of Railways 3 Original twin functions of the HMRI 4 Recent history 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Citations 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksModern HMRI inspectorate editThe modern HMRI within the Office of Road and Rail ORR identifies as The Railway Inspectorate citation needed HMRI works in tandem with the rest of the ORR and as such may be consulted on matters effecting industry efficiency Internally most of HMRI s inspectors are part of the Railway Safety Directorate RSD of the ORR although some Railway Performance and Planning RPP engineers have some more limited powers as warranted HMRI individuals HMRI s role and powers largely mirror the HSE which is the safety regulator in other non railway industries HMRI has powers to enter a railway under section 20 of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 It also issues licensing and drivers licences under the Railways and Other Guided Transport Systems Safety Regulations 2006 ROGS HMRI s individuals are drawn from within industry and experienced HSE inspectors Commonly individuals are professional engineers or time served safety professionals All inspectors are issued a warrant by the chief inspector to that effect Normally an inspector will use the industry Personal Track Safety PTS card However inspectors have the right in reasonable circumstances not to do so citation needed History editFirst fifty years edit Establishment edit The body originated in 1840 as a result of the Railway Regulation Act 1840 Lord Seymour s Act when Inspecting Officers of Railways were first appointed by the Board of Trade BoT 2 Britain s railways at that time were private companies the 1840 Act required them to report to the BoT all accidents which had caused personal injury 3 it also gave the inspectorate powers to inspect any railway and hence from its formation the inspectorate was used to investigate serious railway accidents and report upon them to the BoT Inspection of new lines edit They were tasked with inspecting new lines and commenting on their suitability for carrying passenger traffic However the inspectorate had no powers to require changes until the Railway Regulation Act 1842 An Act for the better Regulation of Railways and for the Conveyance of Troops gave the BoT powers to delay opening of new lines if the inspectorate was concerned about Incompleteness of the Works or permanent Way or the Insufficiency of the Establishment for working the line 4 Crash investigation edit Their first investigation was of the Howden rail crash on 7 August 1840 2 which had killed five passengers although the inspector s report said four three passengers were killed instantly two dying later of their injuries 5 as a result of the derailment of a train caused by the fall of a large casting from a wagon on a passenger train 2 The inspectorate s reports of their accident investigations were made to the BoT alone but eventually published as part of the BoT s annual report to Parliament 6 Competence edit Until the late 1960s HMRI s inspecting officers were all recruited from the Corps of Royal Engineers In the early years of the inspectorate their competence to adjudicate on civil engineering structures was questioned by critics sometimes with good reason A reorganisation of the inspectorate in November 1846 abolished the post of inspector general and led to the departure of Major General Charles Pasley the incumbent and one of his subordinates Pasley had come under criticism 7 after the bridges and earthworks of the North British Railway s line from Edinburgh to Berwick approved by Pasley in June 1846 8 failed to withstand heavy rain in September 1846 with nineteen miles of track being rendered unusable 9 Temporary works were undertaken to restore a service Pasley approved them orally 10 but some of the new work then proved faulty 11 In 1849 the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway s Torksey viaduct across the River Trent was not initially accepted by the railway inspector Lintorn Simmons 12 because he was unhappy with its novel tubular girder design by John Fowler This decision and also the basic premise that a bridge designed by a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers ICE which had passed all practical tests could be rejected by a railway inspector because he was uncomfortable with its novel design was criticised by the ICE The subject has been discussed in the Institution of Civil Engineers and every eminent engineer was of the opinion that the Government inspector was clearly wrong Threatened with a call for a parliamentary enquiry should approval continue to be withheld the inspectorate reconsidered and approved the bridge un modified 13 Subsequently and consequently the BoT took the view that as it explained in defending itself from criticism that the defects in the Tay Bridge should have been seen and acted upon by the inspectorate The duty of an inspecting officer so far as regards design is to see that the construction is not such as to transgress those rules and precautions which practice and experience have proved to be necessary for safety If he were to go beyond this or if he were to make himself responsible for every novel design and if he were to attempt to introduce new rules and practices not accepted by the profession he would be removing from the civil engineer and taking upon himself a responsibility not committed to him by Parliament 14 Critics at the end of the 1850s also noted that during the Crimean War the Grand Crimean Central Railway had been built to forward supplies from Balaclava to British siege lines not by the Royal Engineers but by a consortium of civilian railway contractors If the government turned to civilians as best fitted to build a military railway was it not anomalous that it thought military engineers best fitted to inspect new railway lines 15 Extension and formalisation of powers edit The inspectorate s powers were extended and formalised by the Railway Regulation Act 1871 An Act to amend the Law respecting the Inspection and Regulation of Railways Paragraph 4 extended the power to inspect to give inspectors explicit powers to require the production of persons and papers by a company being inspected Paragraph 5 meant new works on existing lines were liable to the same inspection regime as new lines The BoT could now set up a formal court of inquiry to investigate an accident taking evidence on oath in public hearings Inspectors investigating an accident were now required to make a formal report to the BoT which was now empowered to publish reports from an inspector or from a court of inquiry directly 16 Subsequent public inquiries under the new powers included those into the Shipton on Cherwell train crash in 1874 chaired by an inspector William Yolland and into the Tay Bridge disaster of 1879 However the procedure fell into abeyance after the failure of the three man board of which Yolland by now chief inspecting officer was a member of the Tay Bridge inquiry to arrive at an agreed report For many years in the mid 19th century the Railway Inspectorate advocated in its accident returns and otherwise three safety measures it saw as vital to ensure passenger safety lock Interlocking of points and signals so that conflicting signal indications are prevented block A space interval or absolute block system of signalling where one train is not allowed to enter a physical section until the preceding one had left it and brake Continuous brakes to put at the command of the engine driver adequate braking power this requirement being increased as the technology made it reasonable to automatic in modern parlance fail safe continuous brakes which had to be held off by vacuum or compressed air and would be applied automatically if that supply was lost e g if a train were divided The Board of Trade got as far and as fast as it could by persuasion but had no powers to enforce its views on often reluctant railway managements of existing lines Inspectors disagreed as to whether the board should be given powers to require changes Yolland s official report on an 1867 accident in which eight people died at a junction unaltered since an 1862 fatal accident despite an inspector having urged improvements pressed for such powers Their Lordships have no control whatever over railways after they are once opened for traffic however defective and dangerous the structures and permanent way may be and however imperfectly the construction of junctions and the laying out of altered station yards may provide for the public safety It is true that the practice of the Department is to send one of the inspecting officers to inquire into and report upon the circumstances attending accidents as in this and the former collision at Walton Junction and such inquiries are submitted to by the railway companies but their Lordships are not empowered to make an order for anything to be done No responsibility appears to attach to any person for the complete neglect exhibited towards Captain Tyler s recommendations and the unfortunate signalman of thirty years service who was I have no doubt as he thought doing his duty properly is the only person to whom any liability attaches whereas the expenditure of a small sum would have prevented him from inadvertently committing the act for which he will shortly be tried for manslaughter and have saved the railway company a very large sum of money that must now be paid as compensation for those who suffered The utility of their Lordships continuing to maintain the present system of making these unauthorized inquiries into the circumstances connected with the accidents which occur on railways may therefore be fairly questioned as a stronger instance of its inutility cannot be cited than what has recently occurred with reference to the Walton junction 17 Tyler himself supported the view taken by successive governments that to take such powers would remove the clarity of existing arrangements where responsibility for passenger safety lay with the railway companies alone 18 The death of 80 people on a Sunday school outing in the Armagh rail disaster of 1889 brought a reversal of this policy on the three key issues within two months of the accident Parliament had enacted the Regulation of Railways Act 1889 which authorised the Board of Trade to require the use of continuous automatic brakes on passenger railways along with the block system of signalling and the interlocking of all points and signals This is often taken as the beginning of the modern era in UK rail safety the old happy go lucky days of railway working came to an end 19 Modern era edit The chief inspecting officer from 1916 to 1929 was Colonel John Wallace Pringle responsible for investigating many accidents It was during his tenure in 1919 that the office became part of the newly created Ministry of Transport 20 The last chief inspecting officer with a Royal Engineers background Major Rose retired in 1988 and he was replaced by an appointee from the Health and Safety Executive HSE 21 page needed Since then inspecting officers have been recruited from the HSE or as mid career railway employees from the former British Rail List of chief inspecting officers HM Chief Inspectors of Railways edit Chief inspecting officer DatesLieutenant Colonel Sir John Mark Frederic Smith 1840 1841Major General Charles Pasley 1840 1846Post disappeared as a result of reorganisation in November 1846 there were two inspectors neither designated as chief and neither Pasley 22 Captain Henry Whatley Tyler 1870 1877Lt Col William Yolland 1877 1885Col Frederick Henry Rich 1885 1889Major General Charles Scrope Hutchinson 1892 1895Major Sir Francis Arthur Marindin 1895 1899Lt Col Sir Horatio Arthur Yorke 1900 1913Lt Col Pelham George Von Donop 1913 1916Major Sir John Wallace Pringle 1916 1929Lt Col Sir Alan Henry Lawrence Mount 1929 1949Lt Col George Robert Stewart Wilson 1949 1957Brigadier Charles Ardagh Langley 1958 1963Colonel Denis McMullen 1963 1968Col John Richard Hugh Robertson 1969 1973Lt Col Ian Kenneth Arnold McNaughton 1974 1982Major Charles Frederick Rose 1982 1988Robin J Seymour 1988 1993Stanley S J Robertson 1993 1998Vic Coleman 1998 2002Dr Allan Sefton acting head until November 2002Alan Osborne November 2002 October 2003 23 Dr Allan Sefton October 2003 December 2005Linda Williams December 2005 September 2008Ian Prosser September 2008 2024Richard Hines 2024 Original twin functions of the HMRI editThe function of HMRI was to inspect and approve all new or modified railway works and to investigate railway accidents Accident investigations were inquisitorial generally not open to the public and aimed to determine the causes behind the accident both the immediate cause and contributory factors and to make recommendations to avoid re occurrence Until the 1860s in the first instance accident reports were internal and only published in the accident returns made from time to time by the Board of Trade to Parliament For fatal accidents a coroner s inquest would also be held which inspectors might attend to hear the evidence to assist the coroner or to give evidence themselves of what their investigation had found a In the absence of input from the inspectorate inquests rarely went beyond the immediate cause hence said one inspector in 1870 Coroner s inquests as generally conducted are singularly ill calculated to ascertain the real causes of railway accidents but they are supposed to be sometimes serviceable to the railway companies in concealing the mismanagement of the company from the public 24 Coroner s inquests were public and their proceedings and verdicts widely reported in the press In later years accident reports were published directly widely circulated within the railway industry and reported upon by the press Recent history editThe HMRI became part of the Department of Transport and remained so until 1990 when it was transferred to the Health and Safety Executive HSE About this time HMRI expanded its scope and recruited additional staff Railway Employment Officers It was their job to monitor the workplace safety and health of railway employees After the move to the HSE newsworthy train crash investigations tended to be held as public inquiries presided over by a High Court judge and the findings published These inquiries tended to be more adversarial with the aim of identifying the guilty parties In some cases criminal prosecution of these parties has occurred in parallel with the public inquiry delaying the inquiry until the criminal prosecutions have been completed The transfer to the HSE was unpopular with many in the industry why and as part of its rail review in 2004 the government announced that the Railway Inspectorate would be transferred from the HSE to merge with the Office of Rail Regulation now the Office of Rail and Road The transfer took place on 2 April 2006 The inspectorate oversaw both operational safety and the initial integrity of new and modified works As a result of the legislative change which transferred them to the Office of Rail Regulation the scope of HMRI enforcement no longer covered guided bus trolleybus and most cable hauled transport systems In May 2009 the legal entity known as HM Railway Inspectorate ceased to exist when a single rail regulatory body covering both safety and economic issues the Safety Directorate was created but the 180 individual inspectors will continue to be known as His Majesty s Railway Inspectors 25 See also editRail Accident Investigation BranchNotes edit For an example of this twin track procedure see Evening Standard 1860 p 3 Citations edit Minutes of the 99th RIHSAC Meeting Tuesday 9 June 2015 PDF Office of Rail Regulation 2015 06 09 Retrieved 2019 02 05 a b c Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 p 18 Railway Regulation Act 1840 Railway Regulation Act 1842 York Herald 1840 p 4 The Scotsman 1841 p 2 Morning Post 1846 p 3 Caledonian Mercury 1846 p 3 Thomas 1969 pp 32 33 York Herald 1846 p 3 Carlisle Journal 1846 p 3 Mackay 2013 p 95 Sheffield Independent 1850 p 5 Dundee Courier 1880 p 3 Hansard 1857 Columns 1122 1176 Railway Regulation Act 1871 Yolland 1867 Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 pp 18 20 Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 p 163 Sir John Wallace Pringle PDF Proceedings Institution of Railway Signal Engineers 13 September 1938 Retrieved 2011 07 10 permanent dead link Hall 1990 Hansard 1847 Column 324 Parliament Transport Select Committee evidence Rolt amp Kichenside 1982 p 62 Haigh 2009 p 10 References edit Chapter 97 Railway Regulation Act National Archive 1840 Regnal years 3 4 Victoria Retrieved 2018 01 20 Chapter 55 Railway Regulation Act National Archive 1842 Regnal years 5 6 Victoria Retrieved 2018 01 20 Chapter 78 Railway Regulation Act National Archive 1871 Regnal years 34 35 Victoria Retrieved 2018 01 20 Haigh Philip 3 16 June 2009 Farewell HMRI as ORR introduces Safety Directorate Rail Magazine No 619 Peterborough Bauer Media Hall Stanley 1990 Railway Detectives The 150 year Saga of the Railway Inspectorate Shepperton Ian Allan Ltd ISBN 0 7110 1929 0 Inspectors of Railways House of Commons Debates Parliamentary Debates Hansard 91 1847 03 23 Board of Trade Select Committee Moved For House of Commons Debates Parliamentary Debates Hansard 145 1857 06 04 speaker at columns 1136 1138 is repeating criticisms by George Parker Bidder Mackay Thomas 2013 04 18 The Life of Sir John Fowler Engineer Cambridge University Press pp 95 104 ISBN 978 1 108 05767 7 pages cited give the affair plus Fowler s subsequent views Rolt L T C Kichenside Geoffrey 1982 Red for Danger A History of Railway Accidents and Railway Safety 4th ed Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 8362 0 Thomas John 1969 The North British Railway volume 1 Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 4697 0 Yolland W 1867 07 30 Accident Returns Extract for the Accident at Walton Junction on 29th June 1867 Railways Archive Board of Trade Retrieved 2018 01 21 Opening of the North British Railway Caledonian Mercury 1846 06 22 The North British Railway Carlisle Journal 1846 11 07 Report by the Board of Trade Dundee Courier 1880 07 23 The Helmshore Railway Calamity Evening Standard London 1860 09 13 The Use of General Pasley Morning Post 1846 11 10 Reports on Railway Accidents The Scotsman 1841 04 01 Torksey Bridge Sheffield Independent 1850 04 13 The Awfully Fatal Accident on the Hull and Selby Railway York Herald 1840 08 15 North British Railway York Herald 1846 11 07 Further reading editHutter Bridget M 1997 Compliance Regulation and Environment Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 826475 5 Hutter Bridget M 2001 Regulation and Risk Occupational Health and Safety on the Railways Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 924250 X Rolt L T C 1955 Red for Danger A History of Railway Accidents London John Lane The Bodley Head Ltd Lewis Peter R 2007 Disaster on the Dee Robert Stephenson s Nemesis of 1847 Tempus Describes many key investigations made by the Inspectorate Lewis Peter R 2008 Wheels to Disaster the Oxford train wreck of Christmas Eve 1874 The History Press Describes the early history of the Inspectorate External links editRail Accident Investigation Branch Current investigatory body for rail accidents in the UK Railways Archive Accident Archive contains facsimiles of reports of many HMRI accident investigations accident returns for older investigations accident reports more recently Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title His Majesty 27s Railway Inspectorate amp oldid 1205437666, wikipedia, 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