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Tay Bridge disaster

The Tay Bridge disaster occurred during a violent storm on Sunday 28 December 1879, when the first Tay Rail Bridge collapsed as a North British Railway (NBR) passenger train on the Edinburgh to Aberdeen Line from Burntisland bound for its final destination of Dundee passed over it, killing all aboard. The bridge—designed by Sir Thomas Bouch—used lattice girders supported by iron piers, with cast iron columns and wrought iron cross-bracing. The piers were narrower and their cross-bracing was less extensive and robust than on previous similar designs by Bouch.

Tay Bridge disaster
A contemporary illustration
Details
Date28 December 1879
19:16 (7:16 PM)
LocationTay Rail Bridge, Firth of Tay, Dundee
CountryScotland
LineEdinburgh to Aberdeen Line
OperatorNorth British Railway
Incident typeBridge collapse
CauseStructural failure
Statistics
Trains1
Deaths75 maximum estimate
59 known dead
Injured0
List of UK rail accidents by year

Bouch had sought expert advice on wind loading when designing a proposed rail bridge over the Firth of Forth; as a result of that advice he had made no explicit allowance for wind loading in the design of the Tay Bridge. There were other flaws in detailed design, in maintenance, and in quality control of castings, all of which were, at least in part, Bouch's responsibility.

Bouch died less than a year after the disaster, his reputation ruined. Future British bridge designs had to allow for wind loadings of up to 56 pounds per square foot (2.7 kilopascals). Bouch's design for the Forth Bridge was not used.

Bridge Edit

 
Original Tay Bridge from the north

Construction of the original Tay Rail Bridge began in 1871. In its initial design, the bridge was to be supported by brick piers resting on bedrock. Trial borings had shown the bedrock to lie at no great depth under the river. At either end of the bridge, the bridge girders were deck trusses, the tops of which were level with the pier tops, with the single-track railway running on top. However, in the centre section of the bridge (the "high girders") the bridge girders ran as through trusses above the pier tops (with the railway inside them) in order to give the required clearance to allow passage of sailing ships to Perth.[1]

The bedrock lay much deeper than the trial borings had shown, and the bridge's designer, Sir Thomas Bouch, redesigned the span with fewer piers and correspondingly longer girders. The pier foundations were now constructed by sinking brick-lined wrought iron caissons onto the riverbed, and filling these with concrete. To reduce the weight these had to support, Bouch used open-lattice iron skeleton piers; each pier had multiple cast-iron columns taking the weight of the bridging girders. Wrought iron horizontal braces and diagonal tiebars linked the columns in each pier to provide rigidity and stability.

The basic concept was well known, but for the Tay Rail Bridge, the pier dimensions were constrained by the caisson. For the higher portion of the bridge, there were thirteen girder spans. In order to accommodate thermal expansion, at only three of their fourteen piers was there a fixed connection from the pier to the girders. There were therefore three divisions of linked high girder spans, the spans in each division being structurally connected to each other, but not to neighbouring spans in other divisions.[2] The southern and central divisions were nearly level, but the northern division descended towards Dundee at gradients of up to 1 in 73.[3]

The bridge was built by Hopkin Gilkes and Company (Gilkes), a Middlesbrough company which had worked previously with Bouch on iron viaducts. Gilkes, having first intended to produce all ironwork on Teesside, used a foundry at Wormit to produce the cast iron components, and to carry out limited post-casting machining. Gilkes were in some financial difficulty; they ceased trading in 1880, but had begun liquidation in May 1879, before the disaster.[4] Bouch's brother had been a director of Gilkes, and all three had been colleagues on the Stockton and Darlington thirty years previously; on Edgar Gilkes's death in January 1876, Bouch had inherited shares valued at £35,000, but also owed for a guarantee of £100,000 of Gilkes borrowings and had been unable to extricate himself.[5]

The change in design increased cost and necessitated delay, intensified after two of the high girders fell when being lifted into place in February 1877. The first engine crossed the bridge seven months later. A Board of Trade inspection was conducted over three days of good weather in February 1878; the bridge was passed for use by passenger traffic, subject to a 25 mph (40 km/h) speed limit. The inspection report noted:

When again visiting the spot I should wish, if possible, to have an opportunity of observing the effects of high wind when a train of carriages is running over the bridge.[6]

The bridge was opened for passenger services on 1 June 1878. Bouch was knighted in June 1879 soon after Queen Victoria had used the bridge.

Disaster Edit

On the evening of Sunday 28 December 1879, a violent storm (10 to 11 on the Beaufort scale) was blowing virtually at right angles to the bridge.[7] Witnesses said the storm was as bad as any they had seen in the 20–30 years they had lived in the area;[8][9] one called it a 'hurricane', as bad as a typhoon he had experienced in the China Sea.[10] The wind speed was measured at Glasgow – 71 mph (114 km/h; 32 m/s) (averaged over an hour) – and Aberdeen, but not at Dundee.

Higher windspeeds were recorded over shorter intervals, but at the inquiry an expert witness warned of their unreliability and declined to estimate conditions at Dundee from readings taken elsewhere.[11] One modern interpretation of available information suggests winds were gusting to 80 mph (129 km/h; 36 m/s).[12]

Use of the Tay Rail Bridge was restricted to one train at a time by a signalling block system using a baton as a token. At 7:13 p.m. a North British Railway (NBR) passenger train from Burntisland[13] (consisting of a 4-4-0 locomotive, its tender, five passenger carriages,[note 1] and a luggage van[14]) slowed to pick up the baton from the signal cabin at the south end of the bridge, then headed out onto the bridge, picking up speed.

 
A photograph of the bridge, showing four rails; the inner two guard rails are unpolished.

The signalman turned away to log this and then tended a stove, but a friend present in the signal cabin watched the train: when it got about 200 yards (180 m) from the cabin he saw sparks flying from the wheels on the east side. He had also seen this on the previous train.[15] During the inquiry, testimony was heard that the wind was pushing the wheel flanges into contact with the running rail. John Black, a passenger on the previous train that crossed the bridge, explained that the guard rails protecting against derailment were slightly higher than and inboard of the running rails.[15] This arrangement would catch the good wheel where derailment was by disintegration of a wheel, which was a real risk before steel wheels, and had occurred in the Shipton-on-Cherwell train crash on Christmas Eve 1874.

The sparks continued for no more than three minutes, by which time the train was in the high girders.[16] At that point "there was a sudden bright flash of light, and in an instant there was total darkness, the tail lamps of the train, the sparks and the flash of light all ... disappearing at the same instant."[17] The signalman saw none of this and did not believe it when told. When the train failed to appear on the line off the bridge into Dundee he tried to talk to the signal cabin at the north end of the bridge, but found that all communication with it had been lost.[18]

Not only was the train in the river, but so were the high girders and much of the ironwork of their supporting piers.[note 2] Divers exploring the wreckage later found the train still within the girders, with the engine in the fifth span of the southern 5-span division.[19] There were no survivors;[20] only 46 bodies were recovered[21] out of 59 known victims. Fifty-six tickets for Dundee had been collected from passengers on the train before crossing the bridge; allowing for season ticket holders, tickets for other destinations, and for railway employees, 74 or 75 people were believed to have been on the train.[17] It has been suggested that there were no unknown victims and that the higher figure of 75 arises from double-counting in an early newspaper report in the Dundee Courier,[22] but the inquiry did not take its casualty figures from the press; it took sworn evidence and did its own sums.

Court of inquiry Edit

Evidence Edit

A court of inquiry (a judicial enquiry under Section 7 of the Regulation of Railways Act 1871 "into the causes of, and circumstances attending" the accident) was immediately set up: Henry Cadogan Rothery, Commissioner of Wrecks, presided; supported by Inspector of Railways William Yolland and William Henry Barlow, President of the Institution of Civil Engineers. By 3 January 1880, they were taking evidence in Dundee; they then appointed Henry Law, a qualified civil engineer, to undertake detailed investigations. Whilst awaiting his report they held further hearings in Dundee (26 February – 3 March); having got it they sat at Westminster (19 April – 8 May) to consider the engineering aspects of the collapse.[23]

By then the railway, the bridge's contractor and Bouch had separate legal representation, and the NBR had sought independent advice from James Brunlees and John Cochrane,[24] both engineers with extensive experience of major cast iron structures. The terms of reference did not specify the underlying purpose of the inquiry – to prevent a repetition, to allocate blame, to apportion liability or culpability, or to establish what precisely had happened. This led to difficulties (culminating in clashes) during the Westminster sessions. When the court reported their findings at the end of June, there was both an Inquiry Report signed by Barlow and Yolland and a minority report by Rothery.

Other eyewitnesses Edit

Two witnesses, viewing the high girders from the north almost end-on, had seen the lights of the train as far as the 3rd–4th high girder, when they disappeared; this was followed by three flashes from the high girders north of the train. One witness said these advanced to the north end of the high girders with about fifteen seconds between first and last;[25][note 3] the other that they were all at the north end, with less time between.[26] A third witness had seen "a mass of fire fall from the bridge" at the north end of the high girders.[27] A fourth said he had seen a girder fall into the river at the north end of the high girders, then a light had briefly appeared in the southern high girders, disappearing when another girder fell; he made no mention of fire or flashes.[28][note 4] 'Ex-Provost' Robertson[note 5] had a good view of most of the bridge from his house in Newport-on-Tay,[31] but other buildings blocked his view of the southern high girders. He had seen the train move onto the bridge; then in the northern high girders, before the train could have reached them, he saw "two columns of spray illuminated with the light, first one flash and then another" and could no longer see the lights on the bridge;[note 6] the only inference he could draw was that the lit columns of spray – slanting from north to south at about 75 degrees – were areas of spray lit up by the bridge lights as it turned over.[33]

How the bridge was used – speed of trains and oscillation of bridge Edit

Ex-provost Robertson had bought a season ticket between Dundee and Newport at the start of November, and became concerned about the speed of north-bound local trains through the high girders, which had been causing perceptible vibration, both vertical and lateral. After complaining on three occasions to the stationmaster at Dundee, with no effect on train speed, after mid-December he had used his season ticket to travel south only, using the ferry for north-bound crossings.

Robertson had timed the train with his pocket watch, and to give the railway the benefit of the doubt he had rounded up to the nearest five seconds. The measured time through the girders (3,149 ft or 960 m) was normally 65 or 60 seconds,[note 7] but twice it had been 50 seconds. When observing from the shore, he had measured 80 seconds for trains travelling through the girders, but not on any train he had travelled on. North-bound local trains were often held up to avoid delaying expresses, and then made up time while travelling over the bridge. The gradient onto the bridge at the northern end prevented similar high speeds on south-bound locals. Robertson said that the movement he observed was hard to quantify, although the lateral movement, which was probably one to two inches (25 to 50 mm), was definitely due to the bridge, not the train, and the effect was more marked at high speed.

Four other train passengers supported Robertson's timings but only one had noticed any movement of the bridge.[35][note 8] The Dundee stationmaster had passed Robertson's complaint about speed (he had been unaware of any concern about oscillation) on to the drivers, and then checked times from cabin to cabin (at either end of the bridge the train was travelling slowly to pick up or hand over the baton). However he had never checked speed through the high girders.[37]

Painters who had worked on the bridge in mid-1879 said that it shook when a train was on it.[38][note 9] When a train entered the southern high girders the bridge had shaken at the north end, both east–west and, more strongly, up-and-down.[41] The shaking was worse when trains were going faster, which they did: "when the Fife boat was nearly over and the train had only got to the south end of the bridge it was a hard drive".[42] A joiner who had worked on the bridge from May to October 1879 also spoke of a lateral shaking, which was more alarming than the up-and-down motion, and greatest at the southern junction between the high girders and the low girders. He was unwilling to quantify the amplitude of motion, but when pressed he offered two to three inches (50 to 75 mm). When pressed further he would only say that it was distinct, large, and visible.[43] One of the painters' foremen, however, said the only motion he had seen had been north–south, and that this had been less than one-half inch (15 mm).[44]

How the bridge was maintained – chattering ties and cracked columns Edit

The North British Railway maintained the tracks, but it retained Bouch to supervise maintenance of the bridge. He appointed Henry Noble as his bridge inspector.[45] Noble, who was a bricklayer, not an engineer, had worked for Bouch on the construction of the bridge.[46]

Whilst checking the pier foundations to see if the river bed was being scoured from around them, Noble had become aware that some diagonal tie bars were 'chattering',[note 10] and in October 1878 had begun remedying this. Diagonal bracing was by flat bars running from one lug at a column section top to two sling plates bolted to a lug at the base of the equivalent section on an adjacent column. The bar and sling plates all had a matching longitudinal slot in them. The tie bar was placed between the sling plates with all three slots aligned and overlapping, and then a gib was driven through all three slots and secured. Two "cotters" (metal wedges)[note 11] were then positioned to fill the rest of the slot overlap, and driven in hard to put the tie under tension.

Noble had assumed the cotters were too small and had not been driven up hard in the first place, but on the chattering ties the cotters were loose, and even if driven fully in would not fill the slot and put the bar under tension. By fitting an additional packing piece between loose cotters and driving the cotters in, Noble had re-tightened loose ties and stopped them chattering. There were over 4,000 gib and cotter joints on the bridge, but Noble said that only about 100 had had to be re-tensioned, most in October–November 1878. On his last check in December 1879, only two ties had needed attention, both on piers north of the high girders. Noble had found cracks in four column sections – one under the high girders, three to the north of them – which had then been bound with wrought iron hoops. Noble had consulted Bouch about the cracked columns, but not the chattering ties.[48]

How the bridge was built – the Wormit foundry Edit

The workers at the Wormit foundry complained that the columns had been cast using 'Cleveland iron', which always had scum on it—it was less easy to cast than 'good Scotch metal'[49][note 12] and more likely to give defective castings. Moulds were damped with salt water,[50] cores were inadequately fastened, and moved, giving uneven column wall thickness.[51] The foundry foreman explained that where lugs had been imperfectly cast; the missing metal was added by 'burning on'.[note 13] If a casting had blowholes or other casting defects considered to be minor faults, they were filled with 'Beaumont egg'[note 14] (of which the foreman kept a stock for that purpose) and the casting was used.[55]

How the bridge was built – management and inspection Edit

Gilkes' site staff were inherited from the previous contractor. Under the resident engineer there were seven subordinates including a foundry manager. The original foundry manager left before most of the high girders pier column sections were cast. His replacement was also supervising erection of the bridge, and had no previous experience of supervising foundry work.[56] He was aware of 'burning on',[57] but the use of Beaumont egg had been hidden from him by the foreman.[58] When shown defects in bridge castings, he said he would not have passed the affected columns for use, nor would he have passed columns with noticeably uneven wall thickness.[56] According to his predecessor, burning-on had only been carried out on temporary 'lifting columns', which were used to allow the girders to be lifted into place and were not part of the permanent bridge structure.[59] That was on the instructions of the resident engineer,[60] who had little foundry experience either and relied upon the foreman.[61]

Whilst the working practices were the responsibility of Gilkes, their contract with NBR provided that all work done by the contractor was subject to the approval of the workmanship by Bouch. Hence Bouch would share the blame for any resulting defective work in the finished bridge. The original foundry foreman, who had been dismissed for drunkenness, vouched for Gilkes personally testing for unevenness in the early castings: "Mr. Gilkes, sometimes once a fortnight and sometimes once a month, would tap a column with a hammer, first on one side and then on the other, and he used to go over most of them in that way sounding them."[62] Bouch had spent over £9,000 on inspection (his total fee was £10,500)[63] but did not produce any witness who had inspected castings on his behalf. Bouch himself had been up about once a week whilst the design was being changed, but "afterwards, when it was all going on, I did not go so often".[64]

Bouch kept his own 'resident engineer', William Paterson, who looked after the construction of the bridge, its approaches, the line to Leuchars, and the Newport branch. Paterson was also the engineer of the Perth General Station.[64] Bouch told the court that Paterson's age was 'very much mine' but, in fact, Paterson was 12 years older[note 15] and, by the time of the Inquiry, paralysed and unable to give evidence.[66] Another inspector appointed later[66] was by then in South Australia and also unable to give evidence. Gilkes' managers could not vouch for any inspection of castings by Bouch's inspectors.[67] The completed bridge had been inspected on Bouch's behalf for quality of assembly, but that was after the bridge had been painted (though still before the bridge opened, and before the painter witnesses were on it in the summer of 1879), which hid any cracks or signs of burning-on (though the inspector said that, in any case, he would not know those signs on sight).[68] Throughout construction, Noble had been looking after foundations and brickwork.[note 16]

"The evidence of the ruins" Edit

 
The bridge after its collapse
 
Fallen girders, Tay Bridge

Henry Law had examined the remains of the bridge; he reported defects in workmanship and design detail. Cochrane and Brunlees, who gave evidence later, largely concurred.

  • The piers had not shifted or settled, but the masonry of the pier bases showed poor adhesion between stone and cement: the stone had been left too smooth, and had not been wetted before adding the cement. The hold-down bolts, to which the column bases were fastened, were poorly designed and they burst through the masonry too easily.[70]
  • The connecting flanges on column sections were not fully faced (machined to give smooth flat surfaces fitting snugly against each other), the spigot which should have given positive location of one section in the next was not always present,[note 17] and the bolts did not fill the holes. Consequently, the only thing resisting one flange's sliding over another was the pinching-down action of the bolts.[72] This was reduced as boltheads and nuts were unfaced – some nuts had burrs up to 0.05 inches (1.3 mm) on them (he produced an example). This prevented any holding-down power, since if such a nut were used at a column base joint and the burr subsequently crushed, there would be over 2 inches (51 mm) free play at the top of the column. The nuts used were abnormally short and thin.[73]
  • The column bodies were of uneven wall thickness, as much as 12 inch (13 mm) out; sometimes because the core had shifted during casting, sometimes because the two-halves of the mould were misaligned. Thin metal was undesirable, both in itself and because (since it cooled more quickly) it would be more vulnerable to 'cold shuts'.

    Here (producing a specimen) is a nodule of cold metal which has been formed. The metal, as one would expect in the thin part, is very imperfect. Here is a flaw which extends through the thickness of the metal. Here is another and here is another ... It will be found that all the upper side of this column is of that description, perfectly full of air-holes and cinders. There are sufficient pieces here to show that these flaws were very extensive.[74]

    Bouch said that uneven thickness was unworkmanlike – if he had known, he would have taken the best means to cast vertically – but still safe.[75]
  • The channel-iron horizontal braces did not butt up against the column body; correct separation was dependent on bolts being tightly nipped up (previous comments about the lack of facing applied here also). Because holes in lugs were cast not drilled, their position was more approximate, and some horizontal braces had been site-fitted, leaving burrs up to 316 inch (4.8 mm).[74]
  • In the diagonal bracing, the gib and cotters were roughly forged and left unfaced, and were much too small to withstand in compression the force the bracing bars could put on them.[note 18]
  • On the southernmost fallen pier, every tie bar to the base of one of the columns had had a packing piece fitted.[76]
  • The bolt holes for the lugs were cast with a taper; consequently the bolt-lug contact was by the bolt thread bearing against a knife edge at the outer end of the hole. The thread would easily crush and allow play to develop, and the off-centre loading would fail the lugs at much lower loads than if the hole was cylindrical.[77] Cochrane added that the bolt would bend permanently (and slacken its tiebar to about the extent that had had to be taken up by packing pieces) at an even lower loading than that at which the cotters would deform; he had found some bent tiebar bolts as apparent confirmation.[78]
  • The bracing had failed by the lugs giving way; in nearly every case, the fracture ran through the hole. Law had seen no evidence of burnt-on lugs,[77] but some lug failures involved the lug and a surrounding area of column breaking away from the rest of the column, as would be expected in the failure of a burnt-on section. Moreover, the paint on intact columns would hide any evidence of burning-on.[79]
  • At some piers, base column sections were still standing; at others, base sections had fallen to the west.[80] Cochrane noted that some fallen girders lay on top of the eastern columns, but the western columns lay on top of the girders; hence the engineers concurred that the bridge had broken up before it fell, not as a consequence of its toppling.[80][81][82]
  • Marks on the south end of the southernmost high girder indicated that it had moved bodily eastwards for about 20 inches (510 mm) across the pier before falling to the north.[83]

Bridge materials Edit

Samples of the bridge materials, both cast and wrought iron, were tested by David Kirkaldy, as were a number of bolts, tiebars, and associated lugs. Both the wrought and cast iron had good strength, while the bolts "were of sufficient strength and proper iron".[84][note 19] However, both ties and sound lugs failed at loadings of about 20 tons, well below what had been expected. Both ties[80] and lugs were weakened by high local stresses where the bolt bore on them.[77] Four of the fourteen lugs tested were unsound, having failed at lower than expected loadings. Some column top lugs outlasted the wrought iron, but the bottom lugs were significantly weaker.[85]

 
Salvage operations underway in the Firth of Tay and dockside
 
Images from the Board of Trade, now in the National Library of Scotland

Opinions and analysis Edit

Windloading Edit

Windloading assumed in design Edit

Bouch had designed the bridge, assisted in his calculations by Allan Stewart.[note 20] After the accident Stewart had assisted William Pole[note 21] in calculating what the bridge should have withstood.[note 22] On the authority of Stewart they had assumed that the bridge was designed against a wind loading of twenty pounds per square foot (one kilopascal) 'with the usual margin of safety'.[88][note 23] Bouch said that whilst 20 psf (0.96 kPa) had been discussed, he had been "guided by the report on the Forth Bridge" to assume 10 psf (0.5 kPa) and therefore made no special allowance for wind loading.[90] He was referring to advice given by the Astronomer Royal, Sir George Biddell Airy in 1873 when consulted about Bouch's design for a suspension bridge across the Firth of Forth; that wind pressures as high as 40 psf (2 kPa) might be encountered very locally, but averaged over a 1,600 ft (490 m) span 10 psf (0.5 kPa) would be a reasonable allowance.[91] This advice had been endorsed by a number of eminent engineers.[note 24] Bouch also mentioned advice given by Yolland in 1869 – that the Board of Trade did not require any special allowance for wind loading for spans less than 200 feet (61 m), whilst noting this was for the design of girders not piers.[90][note 25]

Opinions on windloading allowance Edit

Evidence was taken from scientists on the current state of knowledge on wind loading and from engineers on the allowance they made for it. Airy said that the advice given was specific to suspension bridges and the Forth; 40 psf (1.9 kPa) could act over an entire span of the Tay Bridge and he would now advise designing to 120 psf (5.7 kPa)(i.e. 30 psf or 1.4 kPa with the usual margin of safety).[91] The highest pressure measured at Greenwich was 50 psf (2.4 kPa); it would probably go higher in Scotland.

Sir George Stokes agreed with Airy that 'catspaws', ripples on the water produced by gusts, could have a width of several hundred yards. Standard wind pressure measurements were of hydrostatic pressure which had to be corrected by a factor of 1.4–2 to give total wind loading – with a 60 miles per hour (97 km/h) wind this would be 12.5–18 psf (0.60–0.86 kPa).[93] Pole referred to Smeaton's work, where high winds were said to give 10 psf (0.48 kPa), with higher values being quoted for winds of 50 mph (80 km/h) or above, with the caveat that these were less certain.[94]

Brunlees had made no allowance for wind loading on the Solway viaduct because the spans were short and low – if he had had to, he would probably have designed against 30 psf (1.4 kPa) with a safety margin of 4–5 (by limiting strength of iron).[89] Both Pole and Law had used a treatment from a book by Rankine.[note 26] Law agreed with Rankine that the highest wind pressure seen in Britain was 55 psf (2.6 kPa) as the reason for designing to 200 psf (9.6 kPa) (i.e. 50 psf (2.4 kPa) with a safety factor of 4); " in important structures, I think that the greatest possible margin should be taken. It does not do to speculate upon whether it is a fair estimate or not".[95] Pole had ignored it because no reference was given; he did not believe any engineer paid any attention to it when designing bridges;[96] he thought 20 psf (0.96 kPa) a reasonable allowance; this was what Robert Stephenson had assumed for the Britannia Bridge. Benjamin Baker said he would design to 28 psf (1.3 kPa) with a safety margin, but in 15 years of looking he had yet to see wind overthrow a structure that would withstand 20 psf (0.96 kPa). He doubted Rankine's pressures because he was not an experimentalist; told that the data were observations by the Regius Professor of Astronomy at Glasgow University,[note 27] he doubted that the Professor had the equipment to take the readings.[97]

Baker's analysis Edit

Baker argued that the wind pressure on the high girders had been no more than 15 psf (0.72 kPa), from the absence of damage to vulnerable features on buildings in Dundee and the signal cabins at the south end of the bridge. The Inquiry felt that these locations were significantly more sheltered, and therefore rejected this argument. Baker's subsequent work on wind pressures at the Forth Rail Bridge site[98] showed meteorologists were overestimating,[99] but his 15 psf (0.72 kPa) might have over-interpreted the data.[note 28]

Opinions on bridge components Edit

Law had numerous criticisms of the bridge design, some echoed by other engineers:

  • He thought the piers should have been wider (both to counteract toppling and to increase the horizontal component forces the tiebars could withstand) and rectangular (to increase the number of tiebars directly resisting lateral forces); at the very least there should have been lateral bracing between the outermost columns of the piers.[102]
  • The lug holes should have been drilled and the tiebars secured by pins filling the holes (rather than bolts).[73] Cochrane testified that he was not surprised that boltholes had been cast conical. He noted that moulders were notorious for this, unless you stood over them. Even so, he would not rely on supervision or inspection, he would have the holes bored or reamed to ensure they were cylindrical because it had an important bearing on the stability of the structure.[103] Pole – called by Bouch's counsel – agreed.[104]
  • Bouch said if he had known the holes were cast conical he would have had them bored or reamed.[63] Gilkes said casting lug holes conical would have been done "as a matter of course, and unless attention had been drawn to it, it would not be thought then so important as we think it now".[105]
  • Cast-on lugs tended to make unsound castings (Cochrane said he had seen examples in the bridge ruins[103]) and had prevented facing of the outer side of flanges.[102] Cochrane added that their use meant that columns had had to be cast horizontally rather than vertically, thus giving less satisfactory castings;[106] and unless lugs were carefully packed during bolting up they could be damaged or strained.[107]
  • For so tall a pier Gilkes would have preferred some other means of attaching the ties to the columns "knowing how treacherous a thing cast iron is, but if an engineer gave me such a thing to make I should make it without question, believing that he had apportioned the strength properly".[105] A letter from Bouch to Gilkes on 22 January 1875 had noted that Gilkes was "inclined to prefer making the joints of the metal columns the same as on the Beelah and Deepdale".[108] Asked by Rothery why he had departed from the bracing arrangements on the Belah Viaduct, Bouch had referred to changed views on the force of the wind; pressed for other reasons he said Belah-style ties "were so much more expensive; this was a saving of money".[109]

Modelling of bridge failure and conclusions drawn Edit

Both Pole and Law had calculated the wind loading needed to overturn the bridge to be over 30 psf (1.4 kPa) (taking no credit for holding-down bolts fastening the windward columns to the pier masonry)[110] and concluded that a high wind should have overturned the bridge, rather than cause it to break up (Pole calculated the tension in the ties at 20 psf (0.96 kPa) windloading to be more than the 'usual margin of safety' value of 5 tons per square inch but still only half the failure tension.[111]) Pole calculated the wind loading required to overturn the lightest carriage in the train (the second-class carriage) to be less than that needed to overturn the bridge; whereas Law – taking credit for more passengers in the carriage than Pole and for the high girders partially shielding carriages from the wind – had reached the opposite conclusion.[112]

Law: causes were windloading, poor design and poor quality control Edit

Law concluded that the bridge as designed if perfect in execution would not have failed in the way seen[113] (Cochrane went further; it 'would be standing now').[114] The calculations assumed the bridge to be largely as designed, with all components in their intended position, and the ties reasonably evenly loaded. If the bridge had failed at lower wind loadings, this was evidence that the defects in design and workmanship he had objected to had given uneven loadings, significantly reduced the bridge strength and invalidated the calculation.[112] Hence

I consider that in such a structure the thickness of the columns should have been determined, every individual column should have been examined, and not passed until it had received upon it the mark of the person who passed it as a guarantee that it had passed under his inspection ... I consider that every bolt should have been a steady pin, and should have fitted the holes to which it was applied, that every strut should have had a firm abutment, that the joints of the columns should have been incapable of movement, and that the parts should have been accurately fitted together, storey by storey upon land and carefully marked and put together again as they had been properly fitted.[112]

Pole: causes were windloading and impact of derailed carriages Edit

Pole held that the calculation was valid; the defects were self-correcting or had little effect, and some other reason for the failure should be sought.[110] It was the cast iron lugs which had failed; cast iron was vulnerable to shock loadings, and the obvious reason for a shock loading on the lugs was one of the carriages being blown over and into a bridge girder.[110] Baker agreed, but held the wind pressure was not sufficient to blow over a carriage; derailment was either wind-assisted by a different mechanism or coincidental.[115] (Bouch's own view that collision damage to the girder was the sole cause of bridge collapse[116] found little support).

"Did the Train strike the Girders?" Edit

Bouch's counsel called witnesses last; hence his first attempts to suggest derailment and collision were made piecemeal in cross-examination of universally unsympathetic expert witnesses. Law had 'not seen anything to indicate that the carriages left the line' (before the bridge collapse)[117] nor had Cochrane[81] nor Brunlees.[118] The physical evidence put to them for derailment and subsequent impact of one or more carriage with the girders was limited. It was suggested that the last two vehicles (the second-class carriage and a brake van) which appeared more damaged were those derailed, but (said Law) they were of less robust construction and the other carriages were not unscathed.[119] Cochrane and Brunlees added that both sides of the carriages were damaged "very much alike".[114][120]

Bouch pointed to the rails and their chairs being smashed up in the girder holding the last two carriages, to the axle-box of the second-class carriage having become detached and ending up in the bottom boom of the eastern girder,[121] to the footboard on the east side of the carriage having been completely carried away, to the girders being broken up, and to marks on the girders showing contact with the carriage roof,[122] and to a plank with wheel marks on it having been washed up at Newport but unfortunately then washed away.[123] Bouch's assistant gave evidence of two sets of horizontal scrape marks (very slight scratches in the metal or paint on the girders) matching the heights of the roofs of the last two carriages, but did not know the heights he claimed to be matched.[124] At the start of one of these abrasions, a rivet head had lifted and splinters of wood were lodged between a tie bar and a cover plate. Evidence was then given of flange marks on tie bars in the fifth girder (north of the two rearmost carriages), the 'collision with girders' theory being duly modified to everything behind the tender having derailed.[121]

However, (it was countered) the girders would have been damaged by their fall regardless of its cause. They had had to be broken up with dynamite before they could be recovered from the bed of the Tay (but only after an unsuccessful attempt to lift the crucial girder in one piece which had broken many girder ties).[125] The tender coupling (which clearly could not have hit a girder) had also been found in the bottom boom of the eastern girder.[126] Two marked fifth girder tie bars were produced; one indeed had 3 marks, but two of them were on the underside.[127] Dugald Drummond, responsible for NBR rolling stock, had examined the wheel flanges and found no 'bruises' – expected if they had smashed up chairs. If the second-class carriage body had hit anything at speed, it would have been 'knocked all to spunks' without affecting the underframe.[note 29] Had collision with the eastern girder slewed the frame, it would have presented the east side to the oncoming brake van, but it was the west side of the frame that was more damaged. Its eastern footboard had not been carried away; the carriage had never had one (on either side). The graze marks were at 6–7 feet (1.8–2.1 m) above the rail, and 11 feet (3.4 m) above the rail and did not match carriage roof height.[129] Drummond did not think the carriages had left the rails until after the girders began to fall, nor had he ever known a carriage (light or heavy) to be blown over by the wind.[130]

Findings Edit

The three members of the court failed to agree a report although there was much common ground:[131]

Contributory factors Edit

  • neither the foundations nor the girders were at fault
  • the quality of the wrought iron, whilst not of the best, was not a factor
  • the cast iron was also fairly good, but presented difficulty in casting
  • the workmanship and fitting of the piers were inferior in many respects
  • the cross bracing of the piers and its fastenings were too weak to resist heavy gales. Rothery complained that the cross-bracing was not as substantial or as well-fitted as on the Belah viaduct;[132] Yolland and Barlow stated that the weight/cost of cross-bracing was a disproportionately small fraction of the total weight/cost of ironwork[133]
  • there was insufficiently strict supervision of the Wormit foundry (a great apparent reduction of strength in the cast iron was attributable to the fastenings bringing the stress on the edges of the lugs, rather than acting fairly on them)[133]
  • supervision of the bridge after completion was unsatisfactory; Noble had no experience of ironwork nor any definite instruction to report on the ironwork
  • nonetheless Noble should have reported the loose ties.[note 30] Using packing pieces might have fixed the piers in a distorted form.
  • the 25 miles per hour (40 km/h) limit had not been enforced, and frequently exceeded.

Rothery added that, given the importance to the bridge design of the test borings showing shallow bedrock, Bouch should have taken greater pains, and looked at the cores himself.[134]

"True Cause of the Fall of The Bridge" Edit

According to Yolland and Barlow "the fall of the bridge was occasioned by the insufficiency of the cross-bracings and fastenings to sustain the force of the gale on the night of December 28th 1879 ... the bridge had been previously strained by other gales".[135] Rothery agreed, asking "Can there be any doubt that what caused the overthrow of the bridge was the pressure of the wind acting upon a structure badly built and badly maintained?"[134]

Substantive differences between reports Edit

Yolland and Barlow also noted the possibility that failure was by fracture of a leeward column.[135] Rothery felt that previous straining was "partly by previous gales, partly by the great speed at which trains going north were permitted to run through the high girders":[134] if the momentum of a train at 25 miles per hour (40 km/h) hitting girders could cause the fall of the bridge, what must have been the cumulative effect of the repeated braking of trains from 40 miles per hour (64 km/h) at the north end of the bridge?[136] He therefore concluded – with (he claimed) the support of circumstantial evidence – that the bridge might well have failed at the north end first;[137] he explicitly dismissed the claim that the train had hit the girders before the bridge fell.[137]

Yolland and Barlow concluded that the bridge had failed at the south end first; and made no explicit finding as to whether the train had hit the girders.[135] They noted instead that apart from Bouch himself, Bouch's witnesses claimed/conceded that the bridge failure was due to a shock loading on lugs heavily stressed by windloading.[138] Their report is therefore consistent with either a view that the train had not hit the girder or one that a bridge with cross-bracing giving an adequate safety margin against windloading would have survived a train hitting the girder.

Yolland and Barlow noted "there is no requirement issued by the Board of Trade respecting wind pressure, and there does not appear to be any understood rule in the engineering profession regarding wind pressure in railway structures; and we therefore recommend the Board of Trade should take such steps as may be necessary for the establishment of rules for that purpose."[139] Rothery dissented, feeling that it was for the engineers themselves to arrive at an 'understood rule', such as the French rule of 55 psf (2.6 kPa)[note 31] or the US 50 psf (2.4 kPa).[141]

Presentational differences between reports Edit

Rothery's minority report is more detailed in its analysis, more willing to blame named individuals, and more quotable, but the official report of the court is a relatively short one signed by Yolland and Barlow.[142] Rothery said that his colleagues had declined to join him in allocating blame, on the grounds that this was outside their terms of reference. However, previous Section 7 inquiries had clearly felt themselves free to blame (Thorpe rail accident) or exculpate (Shipton-on-Cherwell train crash) identifiable individuals as they saw fit, and when Bouch's solicitor checked with Yolland and Barlow, they denied that they agreed with Rothery that "For these defects both in the design, the construction, and the maintenance, Sir Thomas Bouch is, in our opinion, mainly to blame."[143]

Aftermath Edit

Section 7 inquiries Edit

No further judicial enquiries under Section 7 of the Regulation of Railways Act 1871 were held until the Hixon rail crash in 1968 brought into question both the policy of the Railway Inspectorate towards automated level crossings and the management by the Ministry of Transport (the Inspectorate's parent government department) of the movement of abnormal loads. A Section 7 judicial enquiry was felt necessary to give the required degree of independence.[144] The structure and terms of reference were better defined than for the Tay Bridge inquiry. Brian Gibbens, QC, was supported by two expert assessors, and made findings as to blame/responsibility but not as to liability/culpability.[145]

Wind Pressure (Railway Structures) Commission Edit

The Board of Trade set up a 5-man commission (Barlow, Yolland, Sir John Hawkshaw, Sir William Armstrong and Stokes) to consider what wind loading should be assumed when designing railway bridges.

Windspeeds were normally measured in 'miles run in hour' (i.e. windspeed averaged over one hour) so it was difficult to apply Smeaton's table[146] which linked wind pressure to current windspeed

 

where:

 is the instantaneous wind pressure (pounds per square foot)
 is the instantaneous air velocity in miles per hour

By examination of recorded pressures and windspeeds at Bidston Observatory, the commission found[147] that for high winds the highest wind pressure could be represented very fairly,[note 32] by

 

where:

 is the maximum instantaneous wind pressure experienced (pounds per square foot)
 is the 'miles run in hour' (one hour average windspeed) in miles per hour

However, they recommended that structures should be designed to withstand a wind loading of 56 psf (2.7 kPa), with a safety factor of 4 (2 where only gravity was relied upon). They noted that higher wind pressures had been recorded at Bidston Observatory but these would still give loadings well within the recommended safety margins. The wind pressures reported at Bidston were probably anomalously high because of peculiarities of the site (one of the highest points on the Wirral.[149][150]): a wind pressure of 30–40 psf (1.4–1.9 kPa) would overturn railway carriages and such events were a rarity. (To give a subsequent, well documented example, in 1903 a stationary train was overturned on the Levens viaduct but this was by a 'terrific gale' measured at Barrow in Furness to have an average velocity of 100 miles per hour (160 km/h), estimated to be gusting up to 120 miles per hour (190 km/h).[148])

Bridges Edit

 
The current Tay Bridge at dusk, with the masonry of one of Bouch's piers silhouetted against the sunlit water

A new double-track Tay Bridge was built by the NBR, designed by Barlow and built by William Arrol & Co. of Glasgow 18 metres (59 ft) upstream of, and parallel to, the original bridge. Work started 6 July 1883 and the bridge opened on 13 July 1887. Sir John Fowler and Sir Benjamin Baker designed the Forth Rail Bridge, built (also by Arrols) between 1883 and 1890. Baker and his colleague Allan Stewart received the major credit for design and overseeing building work.[note 33] The Forth Bridge had a 40 mph speed limit, which was not well observed.[152]

Bouch had also been engineer for the North British, Arbroath and Montrose Railway, which included an iron viaduct over the South Esk. Examined closely after the Tay bridge collapse, the viaduct as built did not match the design, and many of the piers were noticeably out of the perpendicular. It was suspected that the construction had not been adequately supervised: foundation piles had not been driven deeply or firmly enough. Tests in 1880 over a period of 36 hours using both dead and rolling loads led to the structure becoming seriously distorted and eight of the piers were declared unsafe.[153][154] Condemning the structure, Colonel Yolland also stated his opinion that "piers constructed of cast-iron columns of the dimensions used in this viaduct should not in future be sanctioned by the Board of Trade."[155] It had to be dismantled and rebuilt by Sir William Arrol to a design by W. R. Galbraith before the line could be opened to traffic in 1881.[153][156][157] Bouch's Redheugh Bridge built 1871 was condemned in 1896, the structural engineer doing so saying later that the bridge would have blown over if it had ever seen windloadings of 19 psf (0.91 kPa).[158]

Reminders Edit

 
A column retrieved from the bridge

The locomotive, NBR no. 224, a 4-4-0 designed by Thomas Wheatley and built at Cowlairs Works in 1871, was salvaged and repaired, remaining in service until 1919, nicknamed "The Diver"; many superstitious drivers were reluctant to take it over the new bridge.[159][160][161][162] The stumps of the original bridge piers are still visible above the surface of the Tay. Memorials have been placed at either end of the bridge in Dundee and Wormit.[163]

A column from the bridge is on display at the Dundee Museum of Transport.

On 28 December 2019, Dundee Walterfronts Walks hosted a remembrance walk to mark the 140-year anniversary of the Tay Bridge disaster.[164]

Sabbatarian response Edit

Some in the Sabbatarian movement, which advocated for restricting activities on Sundays, pointed to the disaster as a punishment from God for traveling on the Sabbath.[165] James Begg, a minister of the Free Church of Scotland, criticized the railway, stating that "The Sabbath of God has been dreadfully profaned by our great public companies", and also criticized the victims, posing the question, "Is it not awful to think that they must have been carried away when many of them must have known that they were transgressing the Law of God?".[160] Punch magazine criticized Begg for "converting the awful catastrophe triumphantly to the account of his own black and bitter creed", and accused him of violating the biblical precept "Judge not that ye be not judged".[166]

Modern reinterpretations Edit

Various additional pieces of evidence have been advanced in the last 40 years, leading to "forensic engineering" reinterpretations of what actually happened.[167][168]

Works of literature about the disaster Edit

The disaster inspired several songs and poems, most famously William McGonagall's "The Tay Bridge Disaster", widely considered to be of such a low quality as to be comical.[169] The German poet Theodor Fontane, shocked by the news, wrote his poem Die Brück’ am Tay [de].[170][171] It was published only ten days after the tragedy happened. C. Horne's ballad In Memory of the Tay Bridge Disaster was published as a broadside in May 1880. It describes the moment of the disaster as:[172]

The train into the girders came,
And loud the wind did roar;
A flash is seen-the Bridge is broke-
The train is heard no more.

"The Bridge is down, "the Bridge is down,"
in words of terror spread;
The train is gone, its living freight
Are numbered with the dead.

See also Edit

Notes and references Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ These constituted, in order from front to rear: a third class carriage, a first class carriage, two more third class carriages, and a second class carriage.[14]
  2. ^ The National Library of Scotland maintains an extensive collection of photographs of the damaged piers and recovered wreckage.
  3. ^ Maxwell, an engineer, thought the flashes too red to be friction sparks unless tinged by ignition of gas escaping from the town gas main on the bridge.
  4. ^ The man to whom he talked next remembered being told by this witness (Barron) that the bridge was in the river, but not that Barron had seen it fall.[29]
  5. ^ One of 3 William Robertsons who gave evidence; Provost of Dundee when the bridge opened, a Justice of the Peace and partner in a major engineering firm in Dundee – "an engineer and therefore able to give evidence with authority..." (Rothery) – a brief biography[30] can be found in the online Dictionary of Scottish Architects
  6. ^ One light on each of the 14 piers in or bordering the navigable channel, of which he had been able to see seven.[32]
  7. ^ he should have measured 85 or 90 seconds if the 25 mph (40 km/h) limit was being observed, 60 seconds is almost 36 mph (58 km/h), 50 seconds almost 42 mph (68 km/h); the bridge had been tested at up to 40 mph (64 km/h).[34]
  8. ^ A further passenger witness spoke of a 'prancing motion' like that felt descending from Beattock Summit or Shap Summit (the gradient at the north end of the bridge closely matches the ruling gradients of Beattock and Shap); as counsel for the North British pointed out that motion would be due to train movement.[36]
  9. ^ They had never worked on a lattice girder bridge before; from disinterested recollections of the viaducts on the Stainmore line[39][40] some noise and vibration should be expected, even on well-founded bridges.
  10. ^ "any of these tie-bars formed by two flat bars of iron are naturally a little out of line because they cross each other, and if they were loose and if there was any vibration it would make one bar strike against another, consequently you would have the noise of one piece of iron hitting against the other"[47]
  11. ^ "The cotters are really wedges, and to prevent those wedges from shaking backwards their ends are split, and they are bent in that position in order to prevent them shifting up". Mins of Evidence p. 255 (H. Laws). McKean ("Battle for the North" p. 142) says the cotters were cast iron, but as will be obvious from the above they were wrought iron. McKean goes on to comment on the failure of the Railway Inspectorate to comment on the hazards of hitting cast iron hard.
  12. ^ The experts agreed with them, but pointed out that Cleveland foundries managed to produce quality castings.
  13. ^ Forming a mould around the defective lug, heating that end of the column, and adding molten metal to fill the mould and – hopefully – adequately fuse with the rest of the column.[52][53]
  14. ^ A paste made of beeswax, fiddler's rosin, fine iron filings and lampblack, melted together, poured into the hole and allowed to set. A corruption of beaumontage, a filler used in furniture-making. "The nature of Beaumont egg is that it appears to be metal when rubbed with a stone."[54]
  15. ^ (born 1810)[65] "perhaps somewhat too advanced in years for a work of this kind", said Rothery
  16. ^ According to Benjamin Baker "all the difficulty is in the foundations. The superstructure of the piers is ordinary everyday work".[69]
  17. ^ A later witness explained that this could not be checked at the foundry, as 'low girder' columns had no spigots.[71]
  18. ^ Law's sums appear (with the wrong number and units at a crucial point) on p. 248 of the Minutes of Evidence; the correct version would seem to be this: The bars had a cross section of one point six two five square inches (10.48 cm2) which should resist more than 8 tons without exceeding 5 ton/square inch, the gibs an area of 0.375 square inch and would fail in compression at about 18 ton/square inch, i.e. somewhat under 7 tons. (For completeness: the lugs – total area about 10 square inches – should resist up to 10 tons without exceeding the much lower design limit for cast iron under tension (1 ton/square inch).)
  19. ^ The bolt-maker had gone bankrupt and various disgruntled workmen had alleged that the iron was bad, the bolt-maker’s buyer bribed, and the bolts untested.
  20. ^ Obituary at [86]
  21. ^ Obituary at [87]
  22. ^ presumably design calculations had not been kept; presumably this was normal practice, since the Inquiry did not comment on this
  23. ^ the Board of Trade expectation was that tensile stress on wrought iron should not exceed 5 ton per square inch; this gave a margin of at least 4 against failure and about 2 against plastic deformation[89]
  24. ^ Sir John Hawkshaw, Thomas Elliot Harrison, George Parker Bidder, and Barlow[92]
  25. ^ factually correct: and the bridge piers were designed without any special allowance for wind loading; on Pole's sums, if they had supported 200-foot-span (61-metre) girders, they would have been "within code" at 20 psf (1.0 kPa); and Cochrane's evidence was that the bridge – if properly executed- would not have failed, which would apply a fortiori with 200 ft (61 m) spans.
  26. ^ p. 184 of "Useful Rules and Tables relating to Mensuration, Engineering Structures and Machines" 1866 edition (1872 edition at [1])was the reference given; the original publication "On the Stability of Factory Chimneys" p. 14 in the Proceedings of the Philosophical Society of Glasgow vol IV [2] gives the authority for the high wind pressure
  27. ^ John Pringle Nichol (named in Rankine's manuscript); Rankine had been Regius Professor of Civil Engineering there.
  28. ^ His most developed example was a pane of glass in a signal cabin
    • taking the wind at near ground level at the southern shore to be the same as 80 feet (24 m) above the Tay in mid-firth because there was quite as much disturbance of the ballast (the Inquiry rejected this assumption and therefore Baker's conclusion)
    • the pressure on the window pane was the same as the wind loading pressure (not valid in the absence of any evidence that leeward windows were open; both Barlow and Rothery corrected him on this[100])
    • from work he had previously done on glass of other dimensions the pane would fail at 18 psf (0.86 kPa) (the inquiry did not discuss this, but the sum seems over-precise given the variable failure pressure of outwardly identical panes of glass[101])
  29. ^ In 1871 at Maryhill an NBR train running at 20–25 miles per hour (32–40 km/h) was fouled by a traveling crane on the opposite line: for details of the damage caused see[128]
  30. ^ Yolland and Barlow say that if he had there would have been ample time to put in stronger ties and fastenings, which is difficult to reconcile with the weak point having been the integrally cast lugs
  31. ^ Used by Gustave Eiffel for the design of the Garabit viaduct (1880) although it only became an official requirement in 1891.[140] The reference cited gives values for design windloading of 2395 N/m2 (US), 2633 N/m2 (Garabit),2649 N/m2 (France, 1891 onwards) and 2682 N/m2(UK, post Tay Bridge). (Eiffel's value is the direct metric equivalent of Rankine's 55 psf; the 1891 French code value rounds that up to a calculationally convenient figure of 270 kg/m2)
  32. ^ "From ... observations taken at Bidston of the greatest hourly velocity and of the greatest pressure on the square foot during gales between the years 1867 and 1895 inclusive, I find that the average pressure (24 readings) for an hourly run of wind at seventy miles per hour (110 km/h) was forty-five pounds per square foot (2.2 kPa). Similarly, the average pressure (18 readings) at eighty miles per hour (130 km/h) was sixty pounds per square foot (2.9 kPa), and that at ninety miles per hour (140 km/h) (only 4 readings) was seventy-one pounds per square foot (3.4 kPa)."[148]
  33. ^ the contractor did his bit- Arrols were also simultaneously involved in building Tower Bridge; William Arrol spent Monday and Tuesday at the Forth Bridge, Wednesday at the Tay Bridge, Thursday at his Glasgow works, Friday and some of Saturday at Tower Bridge; Sunday he took off.[151]

References Edit

  1. ^ Bridge design is described (intermittently) in Minutes of Evidence pp. 241–271(H Law); the bridge design process in Minutes of Evidence pp. 398–408 (Sir Thomas Bouch)
  2. ^ Minutes of Evidence pp. 241–271(H Law)
  3. ^ Report of Court of Inquiry – Appendix 3
  4. ^ "No. 24724". The London Gazette. 20 May 1879. p. 3504.
  5. ^ Mins of Ev p. 440 (Sir T Bouch)
  6. ^ "Tay Bridge Disaster: Appendix to the Report of the Court of Inquiry (page 42)". Retrieved 20 September 2012.
  7. ^ Mins of Ev p. 24 (Captain Scott)
  8. ^ Mins of Ev p. 15 (James Black Lawson)
  9. ^ Mins of Ev p. 33 (Capt John Greig)
  10. ^ Mins of Ev p. 18 (George Clark)
  11. ^ Mins of Ev p. 392 (Robert Henry Scott, MA FRS, Secretary to the Meteorological Council)
  12. ^ Burt, P. J. A. (2004). "The great storm and the fall of the first Tay Rail Bridge". Weather. 59 (12): 347–350. Bibcode:2004Wthr...59..347B. doi:10.1256/wea.199.04.
  13. ^ "The architect of Scotland's Tay Bridge disaster". The Independent. 27 December 2019. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022.
  14. ^ a b Drawing "Correct Arrangement of 4.15 P.M. Train from Edinburgh to Dundee on 28th Decr 1879" reproduced on inside of dust cover of Thomas, John (1969). The North British Railway (volume 1) (1st ed.). Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4697-0.
  15. ^ a b Mins of Ev p. 79 (John Black)
  16. ^ Mins of Ev p. 7 (John Watt)
  17. ^ a b Report of the Court of Inquiry page 9
  18. ^ Secondhand description at Mins of Ev p. 5 (testimony of Thomas Barclay)
  19. ^ Mins of Ev p. 39 (Edward Simpson)
  20. ^ "Scotland's History: The Tay Bridge Disaster". National Records of Scotland. 15 August 2016.
  21. ^ Sheena Tait (20 December 2011). "Did your ancestor die in the Tay Bridge disaster?". Sheena Tait – Scottish Genealogy Research. Retrieved 22 November 2020.
  22. ^ "Courier article to blame for Tay Bridge Disaster death toll confusion, says researcher". Dundee Courier. 28 March 2014.
  23. ^ Report of the Court of Inquiry, page 3
  24. ^ Obituary at "John Cochrane (1823–1891)". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. 109 (1892): 398–399. January 1892. doi:10.1680/imotp.1892.20357.
  25. ^ Mins of Ev p. 19 (Alexander Maxwell)
  26. ^ Mins of Ev p. 19 (William Abercrombie Clark)
  27. ^ Mins of Ev p. 16 (James Black Lawson)
  28. ^ Mins of Ev p. 53 (Peter Barron)
  29. ^ Mins of Ev p. 56 (Henry Gourlay)
  30. ^ "William Robertson – Engineer – (13 August 1825 – 11 July 1899)". Retrieved 12 February 2012.
  31. ^ "Balmore, West Road, Newport-on-Tay". Retrieved 12 February 2012.
  32. ^ Mins of Ev p. 64 (William Robertson)
  33. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 58–59 (William Robertson)
  34. ^ Mins of Ev p. 373 (Major-General Hutchinson)
  35. ^ Mins of Ev (pp. 65–72): Thomas Downing Baxter (speed only), George Thomas Hume (speed only), Alexander Hutchinson (speed and movement) and (p. 88) Dr James Miller (speed only)
  36. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 85–87 (John Leng)
  37. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 72–76 (James Smith)
  38. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 88–97 (David Pirie, Peter Robertson, John Milne, Peter Donegany, David Dale, John Evans)
  39. ^ "Stainmore story – the viaducts". Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  40. ^ "Don't Look Down – the story of Belah viaduct". Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  41. ^ Mins of Ev p. 91 (Peter Donegany)
  42. ^ Mins of Ev p. 95 (John Evans)
  43. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 101–103 (Alexander Stewart)
  44. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 124–125 (Edward Simpson)
  45. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 215–225 (Henry Abel Noble)
  46. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 409–410 (Sir Thomas Bouch)
  47. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 370–373 (Frederic William Reeves)
  48. ^ Mins of Ev p. 219 (Henry Abel Noble), confirmed by pp. 427–429 (Sir Thomas Bouch)
  49. ^ Mins of Ev p. 103 (Richard Baird)
  50. ^ Mins of Ev p. 107 (Richard Baird)
  51. ^ Mins of Ev p. 119 (David Hutton)
  52. ^ "Iron Founding—Uniting Cast Iron by 'Burning-On'". Scientific American. 21 (14): 211. October 1869. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican10021869-211.
  53. ^ Tate, James M.; Strong, Melvin E. (1906). Foundry Practice (Second ed.). H. W. Wilson. p. 43.
  54. ^ Mins of Ev p. 401 (Alexander Milne)
  55. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 144–152 (Fergus Fergusson)
  56. ^ a b Mins of Ev p. 164 (Gerrit Willem Camphuis)
  57. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 158–163 (Gerrit Willem Camphuis)
  58. ^ Mins of Ev p. 208 (Alexander Milne) and p. 211 (John Gibb)
  59. ^ Mins of Ev p. 185 (Frank Beattie)
  60. ^ Mins of Ev p. 280 (Albert Groethe)
  61. ^ Mins of Ev p. 298 (Albert Groethe)
  62. ^ Mins of Ev p 154 (Hercules Strachan)
  63. ^ a b Mins of Ev p. 409 (Sir Thomas Bouch)
  64. ^ a b Mins of Ev p 418 (Sir Thomas Bouch)
  65. ^ 1881 census: National Archive Reference RG number: RG11 Piece: 387 Folio: 14 Page: 37 details for: Croft Bank, West Church, Perthshire
  66. ^ a b Mins of Ev p. 401 (Sir Thomas Bouch)
  67. ^ Mins of Ev p. 514 (Edgar Gilkes), p. 370 (Frederick William Reeves) and p. 290 (Albert Groethe)
  68. ^ Mins of Ev p. 135 (G Macbeath)
  69. ^ Mins of Ev p. 511 (Benjamin Baker)
  70. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 244–245 (Henry Law)
  71. ^ Mins of Ev p. 293 (Albert Groethe)
  72. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 245–246 (Henry Law)
  73. ^ a b Mins of Ev p. 255 (Henry Law)
  74. ^ a b Mins of Ev p. 247 (Henry Law)
  75. ^ Mins of Ev p. 419 (Sir Thomas Bouch)
  76. ^ Mins of Ev p. 252 (Henry Law)
  77. ^ a b c Mins of Ev p.248 (Henry Law)
  78. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 341–343 (John Cochrane)
  79. ^ Mins of Ev p. 318 (Henry Law)
  80. ^ a b c Mins of Ev p. 263 (Henry Law)
  81. ^ a b Mins of Ev p. 345 (John Cochrane)
  82. ^ Mins of Ev p. 467 (Dr William Pole)
  83. ^ Mins of Ev p. 256 (Henry Law)
  84. ^ Mins of Ev p. 483 (Dr William Pole)
  85. ^ Mins of Ev pp. 303–304 (Henry Law)
  86. ^ "Allan Duncan Stewart". Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers. 119: 399–400. January 1895. doi:10.1680/imotp.1895.19862.
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Bibliography Edit

  • Lewis, Peter R. Beautiful Railway Bridge of the Silvery Tay: Reinvestigating the Tay Bridge Disaster of 1879, Tempus, 2004, ISBN 0-7524-3160-9.
  • Lewis, Peter R. Disaster on the Dee: Robert Stephenson's Nemesis of 1847, Tempus Publishing (2007) ISBN 978-0-7524-4266-2
  • Lumley, Robin (2013). Tay Bridge Disaster: The People's Story. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-9946-8.
  • McKean, Charles, Battle for the North: The Tay and Forth Bridges and the 19th-Century Railway Wars: The Building of the Tay and Forth Bridges and the 19th Century Railway Wars Granta 2007.
  • Pease, Joseph, et al., Report from the Select Committee on the North British Railway (Tay Bridge) Bill; Together with the Proceedings of the Committee, and Minutes of Evidence. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1880.
  • Prebble, John, The High Girders: The Story of the Tay Bridge Disaster, 1956 (published by Penguin Books in 1975) ISBN 0-14-004590-2.
  • Rapley, John Thomas Bouch: the Builder of the Tay Bridge, Stroud: Tempus, 2006, ISBN 0-7524-3695-3
  • Rothery, Henry Tay Bridge Disaster: Report Of The Court of Inquiry, and Report Of Mr. Rothery, Upon the Circumstances Attending the Fall of a Portion of the Tay Bridge on the 28th December 1879. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1880 OCLC 30875567.
  • Swinfen, David The Fall of the Tay Bridge, Mercat Press, 1998, ISBN 1-873644-34-5.
  • Thomas, John The Tay Bridge Disaster: New Light on the 1879 Tragedy, David & Charles, 1972, ISBN 0-7153-5198-2.

External links Edit

  • 91 black-and-white photographs of the wrecked piers of the Tay Bridge showing destroyed piers and girders, wreckage of train and steam engine from National Library of Scotland
  • Tom Martin's engineering analysis of the bridge disaster
  • Reappraisal of the Tay Bridge disaster Open University
  • The Tay Bridge Disaster at Failure Magazine
  • Tay Victims listing {reference only}
  • at Suburban Emergency Management Project
  • Tay Bridge Disaster: Appendix to the Report Of The Court of Inquiry. Includes a large number of drawings of the bridge, and calculations of the result of wind pressure on the structure
  • Report from the Select Committee on the North British Railway (Tay Bridge) Bill; together with the Proceedings of the Committee and Mins of Ev. All the oral evidence given, reproduced verbatim – a very large file but sometimes a useful corrective to reinterpretation by secondary sources
  • The Tay Bridge Collection at
  • Was Disaster Built into the First Tay Bridge? Article relating to the University of Dundee's holdings on the disaster

56°26′14.4″N 2°59′18.4″W / 56.437333°N 2.988444°W / 56.437333; -2.988444

bridge, disaster, william, mcgonagall, poem, this, subject, bridge, disaster, occurred, during, violent, storm, sunday, december, 1879, when, first, rail, bridge, collapsed, north, british, railway, passenger, train, edinburgh, aberdeen, line, from, burntislan. For William McGonagall s poem on this subject see The Tay Bridge Disaster The Tay Bridge disaster occurred during a violent storm on Sunday 28 December 1879 when the first Tay Rail Bridge collapsed as a North British Railway NBR passenger train on the Edinburgh to Aberdeen Line from Burntisland bound for its final destination of Dundee passed over it killing all aboard The bridge designed by Sir Thomas Bouch used lattice girders supported by iron piers with cast iron columns and wrought iron cross bracing The piers were narrower and their cross bracing was less extensive and robust than on previous similar designs by Bouch Tay Bridge disasterA contemporary illustrationDetailsDate28 December 1879 19 16 7 16 PM LocationTay Rail Bridge Firth of Tay DundeeCountryScotlandLineEdinburgh to Aberdeen LineOperatorNorth British RailwayIncident typeBridge collapseCauseStructural failureStatisticsTrains1Deaths75 maximum estimate59 known deadInjured0List of UK rail accidents by yearBouch had sought expert advice on wind loading when designing a proposed rail bridge over the Firth of Forth as a result of that advice he had made no explicit allowance for wind loading in the design of the Tay Bridge There were other flaws in detailed design in maintenance and in quality control of castings all of which were at least in part Bouch s responsibility Bouch died less than a year after the disaster his reputation ruined Future British bridge designs had to allow for wind loadings of up to 56 pounds per square foot 2 7 kilopascals Bouch s design for the Forth Bridge was not used Contents 1 Bridge 2 Disaster 3 Court of inquiry 3 1 Evidence 3 1 1 Other eyewitnesses 3 1 2 How the bridge was used speed of trains and oscillation of bridge 3 1 3 How the bridge was maintained chattering ties and cracked columns 3 1 4 How the bridge was built the Wormit foundry 3 1 5 How the bridge was built management and inspection 3 1 6 The evidence of the ruins 3 1 7 Bridge materials 3 2 Opinions and analysis 3 2 1 Windloading 3 2 1 1 Windloading assumed in design 3 2 1 2 Opinions on windloading allowance 3 2 1 3 Baker s analysis 3 2 2 Opinions on bridge components 3 2 3 Modelling of bridge failure and conclusions drawn 3 2 3 1 Law causes were windloading poor design and poor quality control 3 2 3 2 Pole causes were windloading and impact of derailed carriages 3 2 3 3 Did the Train strike the Girders 3 3 Findings 3 3 1 Contributory factors 3 3 2 True Cause of the Fall of The Bridge 3 4 Substantive differences between reports 3 4 1 Presentational differences between reports 4 Aftermath 4 1 Section 7 inquiries 4 2 Wind Pressure Railway Structures Commission 4 3 Bridges 4 4 Reminders 5 Sabbatarian response 6 Modern reinterpretations 7 Works of literature about the disaster 8 See also 9 Notes and references 9 1 Notes 9 2 References 9 3 Bibliography 10 External linksBridge Edit nbsp Original Tay Bridge from the northConstruction of the original Tay Rail Bridge began in 1871 In its initial design the bridge was to be supported by brick piers resting on bedrock Trial borings had shown the bedrock to lie at no great depth under the river At either end of the bridge the bridge girders were deck trusses the tops of which were level with the pier tops with the single track railway running on top However in the centre section of the bridge the high girders the bridge girders ran as through trusses above the pier tops with the railway inside them in order to give the required clearance to allow passage of sailing ships to Perth 1 The bedrock lay much deeper than the trial borings had shown and the bridge s designer Sir Thomas Bouch redesigned the span with fewer piers and correspondingly longer girders The pier foundations were now constructed by sinking brick lined wrought iron caissons onto the riverbed and filling these with concrete To reduce the weight these had to support Bouch used open lattice iron skeleton piers each pier had multiple cast iron columns taking the weight of the bridging girders Wrought iron horizontal braces and diagonal tiebars linked the columns in each pier to provide rigidity and stability The basic concept was well known but for the Tay Rail Bridge the pier dimensions were constrained by the caisson For the higher portion of the bridge there were thirteen girder spans In order to accommodate thermal expansion at only three of their fourteen piers was there a fixed connection from the pier to the girders There were therefore three divisions of linked high girder spans the spans in each division being structurally connected to each other but not to neighbouring spans in other divisions 2 The southern and central divisions were nearly level but the northern division descended towards Dundee at gradients of up to 1 in 73 3 The bridge was built by Hopkin Gilkes and Company Gilkes a Middlesbrough company which had worked previously with Bouch on iron viaducts Gilkes having first intended to produce all ironwork on Teesside used a foundry at Wormit to produce the cast iron components and to carry out limited post casting machining Gilkes were in some financial difficulty they ceased trading in 1880 but had begun liquidation in May 1879 before the disaster 4 Bouch s brother had been a director of Gilkes and all three had been colleagues on the Stockton and Darlington thirty years previously on Edgar Gilkes s death in January 1876 Bouch had inherited shares valued at 35 000 but also owed for a guarantee of 100 000 of Gilkes borrowings and had been unable to extricate himself 5 The change in design increased cost and necessitated delay intensified after two of the high girders fell when being lifted into place in February 1877 The first engine crossed the bridge seven months later A Board of Trade inspection was conducted over three days of good weather in February 1878 the bridge was passed for use by passenger traffic subject to a 25 mph 40 km h speed limit The inspection report noted When again visiting the spot I should wish if possible to have an opportunity of observing the effects of high wind when a train of carriages is running over the bridge 6 The bridge was opened for passenger services on 1 June 1878 Bouch was knighted in June 1879 soon after Queen Victoria had used the bridge Disaster EditOn the evening of Sunday 28 December 1879 a violent storm 10 to 11 on the Beaufort scale was blowing virtually at right angles to the bridge 7 Witnesses said the storm was as bad as any they had seen in the 20 30 years they had lived in the area 8 9 one called it a hurricane as bad as a typhoon he had experienced in the China Sea 10 The wind speed was measured at Glasgow 71 mph 114 km h 32 m s averaged over an hour and Aberdeen but not at Dundee Higher windspeeds were recorded over shorter intervals but at the inquiry an expert witness warned of their unreliability and declined to estimate conditions at Dundee from readings taken elsewhere 11 One modern interpretation of available information suggests winds were gusting to 80 mph 129 km h 36 m s 12 Use of the Tay Rail Bridge was restricted to one train at a time by a signalling block system using a baton as a token At 7 13 p m a North British Railway NBR passenger train from Burntisland 13 consisting of a 4 4 0 locomotive its tender five passenger carriages note 1 and a luggage van 14 slowed to pick up the baton from the signal cabin at the south end of the bridge then headed out onto the bridge picking up speed nbsp A photograph of the bridge showing four rails the inner two guard rails are unpolished The signalman turned away to log this and then tended a stove but a friend present in the signal cabin watched the train when it got about 200 yards 180 m from the cabin he saw sparks flying from the wheels on the east side He had also seen this on the previous train 15 During the inquiry testimony was heard that the wind was pushing the wheel flanges into contact with the running rail John Black a passenger on the previous train that crossed the bridge explained that the guard rails protecting against derailment were slightly higher than and inboard of the running rails 15 This arrangement would catch the good wheel where derailment was by disintegration of a wheel which was a real risk before steel wheels and had occurred in the Shipton on Cherwell train crash on Christmas Eve 1874 The sparks continued for no more than three minutes by which time the train was in the high girders 16 At that point there was a sudden bright flash of light and in an instant there was total darkness the tail lamps of the train the sparks and the flash of light all disappearing at the same instant 17 The signalman saw none of this and did not believe it when told When the train failed to appear on the line off the bridge into Dundee he tried to talk to the signal cabin at the north end of the bridge but found that all communication with it had been lost 18 Not only was the train in the river but so were the high girders and much of the ironwork of their supporting piers note 2 Divers exploring the wreckage later found the train still within the girders with the engine in the fifth span of the southern 5 span division 19 There were no survivors 20 only 46 bodies were recovered 21 out of 59 known victims Fifty six tickets for Dundee had been collected from passengers on the train before crossing the bridge allowing for season ticket holders tickets for other destinations and for railway employees 74 or 75 people were believed to have been on the train 17 It has been suggested that there were no unknown victims and that the higher figure of 75 arises from double counting in an early newspaper report in the Dundee Courier 22 but the inquiry did not take its casualty figures from the press it took sworn evidence and did its own sums nbsp The locomotive was dropped during retrieval but eventually recovered and returned to service nbsp The left front of the recovered locomotive tender nbsp Two wagons holding wreckage salvaged from the train nbsp Fallen girders with remains of a wooden train carriageCourt of inquiry EditEvidence Edit A court of inquiry a judicial enquiry under Section 7 of the Regulation of Railways Act 1871 into the causes of and circumstances attending the accident was immediately set up Henry Cadogan Rothery Commissioner of Wrecks presided supported by Inspector of Railways William Yolland and William Henry Barlow President of the Institution of Civil Engineers By 3 January 1880 they were taking evidence in Dundee they then appointed Henry Law a qualified civil engineer to undertake detailed investigations Whilst awaiting his report they held further hearings in Dundee 26 February 3 March having got it they sat at Westminster 19 April 8 May to consider the engineering aspects of the collapse 23 By then the railway the bridge s contractor and Bouch had separate legal representation and the NBR had sought independent advice from James Brunlees and John Cochrane 24 both engineers with extensive experience of major cast iron structures The terms of reference did not specify the underlying purpose of the inquiry to prevent a repetition to allocate blame to apportion liability or culpability or to establish what precisely had happened This led to difficulties culminating in clashes during the Westminster sessions When the court reported their findings at the end of June there was both an Inquiry Report signed by Barlow and Yolland and a minority report by Rothery Other eyewitnesses Edit Two witnesses viewing the high girders from the north almost end on had seen the lights of the train as far as the 3rd 4th high girder when they disappeared this was followed by three flashes from the high girders north of the train One witness said these advanced to the north end of the high girders with about fifteen seconds between first and last 25 note 3 the other that they were all at the north end with less time between 26 A third witness had seen a mass of fire fall from the bridge at the north end of the high girders 27 A fourth said he had seen a girder fall into the river at the north end of the high girders then a light had briefly appeared in the southern high girders disappearing when another girder fell he made no mention of fire or flashes 28 note 4 Ex Provost Robertson note 5 had a good view of most of the bridge from his house in Newport on Tay 31 but other buildings blocked his view of the southern high girders He had seen the train move onto the bridge then in the northern high girders before the train could have reached them he saw two columns of spray illuminated with the light first one flash and then another and could no longer see the lights on the bridge note 6 the only inference he could draw was that the lit columns of spray slanting from north to south at about 75 degrees were areas of spray lit up by the bridge lights as it turned over 33 How the bridge was used speed of trains and oscillation of bridge Edit Ex provost Robertson had bought a season ticket between Dundee and Newport at the start of November and became concerned about the speed of north bound local trains through the high girders which had been causing perceptible vibration both vertical and lateral After complaining on three occasions to the stationmaster at Dundee with no effect on train speed after mid December he had used his season ticket to travel south only using the ferry for north bound crossings Robertson had timed the train with his pocket watch and to give the railway the benefit of the doubt he had rounded up to the nearest five seconds The measured time through the girders 3 149 ft or 960 m was normally 65 or 60 seconds note 7 but twice it had been 50 seconds When observing from the shore he had measured 80 seconds for trains travelling through the girders but not on any train he had travelled on North bound local trains were often held up to avoid delaying expresses and then made up time while travelling over the bridge The gradient onto the bridge at the northern end prevented similar high speeds on south bound locals Robertson said that the movement he observed was hard to quantify although the lateral movement which was probably one to two inches 25 to 50 mm was definitely due to the bridge not the train and the effect was more marked at high speed Four other train passengers supported Robertson s timings but only one had noticed any movement of the bridge 35 note 8 The Dundee stationmaster had passed Robertson s complaint about speed he had been unaware of any concern about oscillation on to the drivers and then checked times from cabin to cabin at either end of the bridge the train was travelling slowly to pick up or hand over the baton However he had never checked speed through the high girders 37 Painters who had worked on the bridge in mid 1879 said that it shook when a train was on it 38 note 9 When a train entered the southern high girders the bridge had shaken at the north end both east west and more strongly up and down 41 The shaking was worse when trains were going faster which they did when the Fife boat was nearly over and the train had only got to the south end of the bridge it was a hard drive 42 A joiner who had worked on the bridge from May to October 1879 also spoke of a lateral shaking which was more alarming than the up and down motion and greatest at the southern junction between the high girders and the low girders He was unwilling to quantify the amplitude of motion but when pressed he offered two to three inches 50 to 75 mm When pressed further he would only say that it was distinct large and visible 43 One of the painters foremen however said the only motion he had seen had been north south and that this had been less than one half inch 15 mm 44 How the bridge was maintained chattering ties and cracked columns Edit The North British Railway maintained the tracks but it retained Bouch to supervise maintenance of the bridge He appointed Henry Noble as his bridge inspector 45 Noble who was a bricklayer not an engineer had worked for Bouch on the construction of the bridge 46 Whilst checking the pier foundations to see if the river bed was being scoured from around them Noble had become aware that some diagonal tie bars were chattering note 10 and in October 1878 had begun remedying this Diagonal bracing was by flat bars running from one lug at a column section top to two sling plates bolted to a lug at the base of the equivalent section on an adjacent column The bar and sling plates all had a matching longitudinal slot in them The tie bar was placed between the sling plates with all three slots aligned and overlapping and then a gib was driven through all three slots and secured Two cotters metal wedges note 11 were then positioned to fill the rest of the slot overlap and driven in hard to put the tie under tension Noble had assumed the cotters were too small and had not been driven up hard in the first place but on the chattering ties the cotters were loose and even if driven fully in would not fill the slot and put the bar under tension By fitting an additional packing piece between loose cotters and driving the cotters in Noble had re tightened loose ties and stopped them chattering There were over 4 000 gib and cotter joints on the bridge but Noble said that only about 100 had had to be re tensioned most in October November 1878 On his last check in December 1879 only two ties had needed attention both on piers north of the high girders Noble had found cracks in four column sections one under the high girders three to the north of them which had then been bound with wrought iron hoops Noble had consulted Bouch about the cracked columns but not the chattering ties 48 How the bridge was built the Wormit foundry Edit The workers at the Wormit foundry complained that the columns had been cast using Cleveland iron which always had scum on it it was less easy to cast than good Scotch metal 49 note 12 and more likely to give defective castings Moulds were damped with salt water 50 cores were inadequately fastened and moved giving uneven column wall thickness 51 The foundry foreman explained that where lugs had been imperfectly cast the missing metal was added by burning on note 13 If a casting had blowholes or other casting defects considered to be minor faults they were filled with Beaumont egg note 14 of which the foreman kept a stock for that purpose and the casting was used 55 How the bridge was built management and inspection Edit Gilkes site staff were inherited from the previous contractor Under the resident engineer there were seven subordinates including a foundry manager The original foundry manager left before most of the high girders pier column sections were cast His replacement was also supervising erection of the bridge and had no previous experience of supervising foundry work 56 He was aware of burning on 57 but the use of Beaumont egg had been hidden from him by the foreman 58 When shown defects in bridge castings he said he would not have passed the affected columns for use nor would he have passed columns with noticeably uneven wall thickness 56 According to his predecessor burning on had only been carried out on temporary lifting columns which were used to allow the girders to be lifted into place and were not part of the permanent bridge structure 59 That was on the instructions of the resident engineer 60 who had little foundry experience either and relied upon the foreman 61 Whilst the working practices were the responsibility of Gilkes their contract with NBR provided that all work done by the contractor was subject to the approval of the workmanship by Bouch Hence Bouch would share the blame for any resulting defective work in the finished bridge The original foundry foreman who had been dismissed for drunkenness vouched for Gilkes personally testing for unevenness in the early castings Mr Gilkes sometimes once a fortnight and sometimes once a month would tap a column with a hammer first on one side and then on the other and he used to go over most of them in that way sounding them 62 Bouch had spent over 9 000 on inspection his total fee was 10 500 63 but did not produce any witness who had inspected castings on his behalf Bouch himself had been up about once a week whilst the design was being changed but afterwards when it was all going on I did not go so often 64 Bouch kept his own resident engineer William Paterson who looked after the construction of the bridge its approaches the line to Leuchars and the Newport branch Paterson was also the engineer of the Perth General Station 64 Bouch told the court that Paterson s age was very much mine but in fact Paterson was 12 years older note 15 and by the time of the Inquiry paralysed and unable to give evidence 66 Another inspector appointed later 66 was by then in South Australia and also unable to give evidence Gilkes managers could not vouch for any inspection of castings by Bouch s inspectors 67 The completed bridge had been inspected on Bouch s behalf for quality of assembly but that was after the bridge had been painted though still before the bridge opened and before the painter witnesses were on it in the summer of 1879 which hid any cracks or signs of burning on though the inspector said that in any case he would not know those signs on sight 68 Throughout construction Noble had been looking after foundations and brickwork note 16 The evidence of the ruins Edit nbsp The bridge after its collapse nbsp Fallen girders Tay BridgeHenry Law had examined the remains of the bridge he reported defects in workmanship and design detail Cochrane and Brunlees who gave evidence later largely concurred The piers had not shifted or settled but the masonry of the pier bases showed poor adhesion between stone and cement the stone had been left too smooth and had not been wetted before adding the cement The hold down bolts to which the column bases were fastened were poorly designed and they burst through the masonry too easily 70 The connecting flanges on column sections were not fully faced machined to give smooth flat surfaces fitting snugly against each other the spigot which should have given positive location of one section in the next was not always present note 17 and the bolts did not fill the holes Consequently the only thing resisting one flange s sliding over another was the pinching down action of the bolts 72 This was reduced as boltheads and nuts were unfaced some nuts had burrs up to 0 05 inches 1 3 mm on them he produced an example This prevented any holding down power since if such a nut were used at a column base joint and the burr subsequently crushed there would be over 2 inches 51 mm free play at the top of the column The nuts used were abnormally short and thin 73 The column bodies were of uneven wall thickness as much as 1 2 inch 13 mm out sometimes because the core had shifted during casting sometimes because the two halves of the mould were misaligned Thin metal was undesirable both in itself and because since it cooled more quickly it would be more vulnerable to cold shuts Here producing a specimen is a nodule of cold metal which has been formed The metal as one would expect in the thin part is very imperfect Here is a flaw which extends through the thickness of the metal Here is another and here is another It will be found that all the upper side of this column is of that description perfectly full of air holes and cinders There are sufficient pieces here to show that these flaws were very extensive 74 Bouch said that uneven thickness was unworkmanlike if he had known he would have taken the best means to cast vertically but still safe 75 The channel iron horizontal braces did not butt up against the column body correct separation was dependent on bolts being tightly nipped up previous comments about the lack of facing applied here also Because holes in lugs were cast not drilled their position was more approximate and some horizontal braces had been site fitted leaving burrs up to 3 16 inch 4 8 mm 74 In the diagonal bracing the gib and cotters were roughly forged and left unfaced and were much too small to withstand in compression the force the bracing bars could put on them note 18 On the southernmost fallen pier every tie bar to the base of one of the columns had had a packing piece fitted 76 The bolt holes for the lugs were cast with a taper consequently the bolt lug contact was by the bolt thread bearing against a knife edge at the outer end of the hole The thread would easily crush and allow play to develop and the off centre loading would fail the lugs at much lower loads than if the hole was cylindrical 77 Cochrane added that the bolt would bend permanently and slacken its tiebar to about the extent that had had to be taken up by packing pieces at an even lower loading than that at which the cotters would deform he had found some bent tiebar bolts as apparent confirmation 78 The bracing had failed by the lugs giving way in nearly every case the fracture ran through the hole Law had seen no evidence of burnt on lugs 77 but some lug failures involved the lug and a surrounding area of column breaking away from the rest of the column as would be expected in the failure of a burnt on section Moreover the paint on intact columns would hide any evidence of burning on 79 At some piers base column sections were still standing at others base sections had fallen to the west 80 Cochrane noted that some fallen girders lay on top of the eastern columns but the western columns lay on top of the girders hence the engineers concurred that the bridge had broken up before it fell not as a consequence of its toppling 80 81 82 Marks on the south end of the southernmost high girder indicated that it had moved bodily eastwards for about 20 inches 510 mm across the pier before falling to the north 83 Bridge materials Edit Samples of the bridge materials both cast and wrought iron were tested by David Kirkaldy as were a number of bolts tiebars and associated lugs Both the wrought and cast iron had good strength while the bolts were of sufficient strength and proper iron 84 note 19 However both ties and sound lugs failed at loadings of about 20 tons well below what had been expected Both ties 80 and lugs were weakened by high local stresses where the bolt bore on them 77 Four of the fourteen lugs tested were unsound having failed at lower than expected loadings Some column top lugs outlasted the wrought iron but the bottom lugs were significantly weaker 85 nbsp Salvage operations underway in the Firth of Tay and dockside nbsp Images from the Board of Trade now in the National Library of Scotland Opinions and analysis Edit Windloading Edit Windloading assumed in design Edit Bouch had designed the bridge assisted in his calculations by Allan Stewart note 20 After the accident Stewart had assisted William Pole note 21 in calculating what the bridge should have withstood note 22 On the authority of Stewart they had assumed that the bridge was designed against a wind loading of twenty pounds per square foot one kilopascal with the usual margin of safety 88 note 23 Bouch said that whilst 20 psf 0 96 kPa had been discussed he had been guided by the report on the Forth Bridge to assume 10 psf 0 5 kPa and therefore made no special allowance for wind loading 90 He was referring to advice given by the Astronomer Royal Sir George Biddell Airy in 1873 when consulted about Bouch s design for a suspension bridge across the Firth of Forth that wind pressures as high as 40 psf 2 kPa might be encountered very locally but averaged over a 1 600 ft 490 m span 10 psf 0 5 kPa would be a reasonable allowance 91 This advice had been endorsed by a number of eminent engineers note 24 Bouch also mentioned advice given by Yolland in 1869 that the Board of Trade did not require any special allowance for wind loading for spans less than 200 feet 61 m whilst noting this was for the design of girders not piers 90 note 25 Opinions on windloading allowance Edit Evidence was taken from scientists on the current state of knowledge on wind loading and from engineers on the allowance they made for it Airy said that the advice given was specific to suspension bridges and the Forth 40 psf 1 9 kPa could act over an entire span of the Tay Bridge and he would now advise designing to 120 psf 5 7 kPa i e 30 psf or 1 4 kPa with the usual margin of safety 91 The highest pressure measured at Greenwich was 50 psf 2 4 kPa it would probably go higher in Scotland Sir George Stokes agreed with Airy that catspaws ripples on the water produced by gusts could have a width of several hundred yards Standard wind pressure measurements were of hydrostatic pressure which had to be corrected by a factor of 1 4 2 to give total wind loading with a 60 miles per hour 97 km h wind this would be 12 5 18 psf 0 60 0 86 kPa 93 Pole referred to Smeaton s work where high winds were said to give 10 psf 0 48 kPa with higher values being quoted for winds of 50 mph 80 km h or above with the caveat that these were less certain 94 Brunlees had made no allowance for wind loading on the Solway viaduct because the spans were short and low if he had had to he would probably have designed against 30 psf 1 4 kPa with a safety margin of 4 5 by limiting strength of iron 89 Both Pole and Law had used a treatment from a book by Rankine note 26 Law agreed with Rankine that the highest wind pressure seen in Britain was 55 psf 2 6 kPa as the reason for designing to 200 psf 9 6 kPa i e 50 psf 2 4 kPa with a safety factor of 4 in important structures I think that the greatest possible margin should be taken It does not do to speculate upon whether it is a fair estimate or not 95 Pole had ignored it because no reference was given he did not believe any engineer paid any attention to it when designing bridges 96 he thought 20 psf 0 96 kPa a reasonable allowance this was what Robert Stephenson had assumed for the Britannia Bridge Benjamin Baker said he would design to 28 psf 1 3 kPa with a safety margin but in 15 years of looking he had yet to see wind overthrow a structure that would withstand 20 psf 0 96 kPa He doubted Rankine s pressures because he was not an experimentalist told that the data were observations by the Regius Professor of Astronomy at Glasgow University note 27 he doubted that the Professor had the equipment to take the readings 97 Baker s analysis Edit Baker argued that the wind pressure on the high girders had been no more than 15 psf 0 72 kPa from the absence of damage to vulnerable features on buildings in Dundee and the signal cabins at the south end of the bridge The Inquiry felt that these locations were significantly more sheltered and therefore rejected this argument Baker s subsequent work on wind pressures at the Forth Rail Bridge site 98 showed meteorologists were overestimating 99 but his 15 psf 0 72 kPa might have over interpreted the data note 28 Opinions on bridge components Edit Law had numerous criticisms of the bridge design some echoed by other engineers He thought the piers should have been wider both to counteract toppling and to increase the horizontal component forces the tiebars could withstand and rectangular to increase the number of tiebars directly resisting lateral forces at the very least there should have been lateral bracing between the outermost columns of the piers 102 The lug holes should have been drilled and the tiebars secured by pins filling the holes rather than bolts 73 Cochrane testified that he was not surprised that boltholes had been cast conical He noted that moulders were notorious for this unless you stood over them Even so he would not rely on supervision or inspection he would have the holes bored or reamed to ensure they were cylindrical because it had an important bearing on the stability of the structure 103 Pole called by Bouch s counsel agreed 104 Bouch said if he had known the holes were cast conical he would have had them bored or reamed 63 Gilkes said casting lug holes conical would have been done as a matter of course and unless attention had been drawn to it it would not be thought then so important as we think it now 105 Cast on lugs tended to make unsound castings Cochrane said he had seen examples in the bridge ruins 103 and had prevented facing of the outer side of flanges 102 Cochrane added that their use meant that columns had had to be cast horizontally rather than vertically thus giving less satisfactory castings 106 and unless lugs were carefully packed during bolting up they could be damaged or strained 107 For so tall a pier Gilkes would have preferred some other means of attaching the ties to the columns knowing how treacherous a thing cast iron is but if an engineer gave me such a thing to make I should make it without question believing that he had apportioned the strength properly 105 A letter from Bouch to Gilkes on 22 January 1875 had noted that Gilkes was inclined to prefer making the joints of the metal columns the same as on the Beelah and Deepdale 108 Asked by Rothery why he had departed from the bracing arrangements on the Belah Viaduct Bouch had referred to changed views on the force of the wind pressed for other reasons he said Belah style ties were so much more expensive this was a saving of money 109 Modelling of bridge failure and conclusions drawn Edit Both Pole and Law had calculated the wind loading needed to overturn the bridge to be over 30 psf 1 4 kPa taking no credit for holding down bolts fastening the windward columns to the pier masonry 110 and concluded that a high wind should have overturned the bridge rather than cause it to break up Pole calculated the tension in the ties at 20 psf 0 96 kPa windloading to be more than the usual margin of safety value of 5 tons per square inch but still only half the failure tension 111 Pole calculated the wind loading required to overturn the lightest carriage in the train the second class carriage to be less than that needed to overturn the bridge whereas Law taking credit for more passengers in the carriage than Pole and for the high girders partially shielding carriages from the wind had reached the opposite conclusion 112 Law causes were windloading poor design and poor quality control Edit Law concluded that the bridge as designed if perfect in execution would not have failed in the way seen 113 Cochrane went further it would be standing now 114 The calculations assumed the bridge to be largely as designed with all components in their intended position and the ties reasonably evenly loaded If the bridge had failed at lower wind loadings this was evidence that the defects in design and workmanship he had objected to had given uneven loadings significantly reduced the bridge strength and invalidated the calculation 112 Hence I consider that in such a structure the thickness of the columns should have been determined every individual column should have been examined and not passed until it had received upon it the mark of the person who passed it as a guarantee that it had passed under his inspection I consider that every bolt should have been a steady pin and should have fitted the holes to which it was applied that every strut should have had a firm abutment that the joints of the columns should have been incapable of movement and that the parts should have been accurately fitted together storey by storey upon land and carefully marked and put together again as they had been properly fitted 112 Pole causes were windloading and impact of derailed carriages Edit Pole held that the calculation was valid the defects were self correcting or had little effect and some other reason for the failure should be sought 110 It was the cast iron lugs which had failed cast iron was vulnerable to shock loadings and the obvious reason for a shock loading on the lugs was one of the carriages being blown over and into a bridge girder 110 Baker agreed but held the wind pressure was not sufficient to blow over a carriage derailment was either wind assisted by a different mechanism or coincidental 115 Bouch s own view that collision damage to the girder was the sole cause of bridge collapse 116 found little support Did the Train strike the Girders Edit Bouch s counsel called witnesses last hence his first attempts to suggest derailment and collision were made piecemeal in cross examination of universally unsympathetic expert witnesses Law had not seen anything to indicate that the carriages left the line before the bridge collapse 117 nor had Cochrane 81 nor Brunlees 118 The physical evidence put to them for derailment and subsequent impact of one or more carriage with the girders was limited It was suggested that the last two vehicles the second class carriage and a brake van which appeared more damaged were those derailed but said Law they were of less robust construction and the other carriages were not unscathed 119 Cochrane and Brunlees added that both sides of the carriages were damaged very much alike 114 120 Bouch pointed to the rails and their chairs being smashed up in the girder holding the last two carriages to the axle box of the second class carriage having become detached and ending up in the bottom boom of the eastern girder 121 to the footboard on the east side of the carriage having been completely carried away to the girders being broken up and to marks on the girders showing contact with the carriage roof 122 and to a plank with wheel marks on it having been washed up at Newport but unfortunately then washed away 123 Bouch s assistant gave evidence of two sets of horizontal scrape marks very slight scratches in the metal or paint on the girders matching the heights of the roofs of the last two carriages but did not know the heights he claimed to be matched 124 At the start of one of these abrasions a rivet head had lifted and splinters of wood were lodged between a tie bar and a cover plate Evidence was then given of flange marks on tie bars in the fifth girder north of the two rearmost carriages the collision with girders theory being duly modified to everything behind the tender having derailed 121 However it was countered the girders would have been damaged by their fall regardless of its cause They had had to be broken up with dynamite before they could be recovered from the bed of the Tay but only after an unsuccessful attempt to lift the crucial girder in one piece which had broken many girder ties 125 The tender coupling which clearly could not have hit a girder had also been found in the bottom boom of the eastern girder 126 Two marked fifth girder tie bars were produced one indeed had 3 marks but two of them were on the underside 127 Dugald Drummond responsible for NBR rolling stock had examined the wheel flanges and found no bruises expected if they had smashed up chairs If the second class carriage body had hit anything at speed it would have been knocked all to spunks without affecting the underframe note 29 Had collision with the eastern girder slewed the frame it would have presented the east side to the oncoming brake van but it was the west side of the frame that was more damaged Its eastern footboard had not been carried away the carriage had never had one on either side The graze marks were at 6 7 feet 1 8 2 1 m above the rail and 11 feet 3 4 m above the rail and did not match carriage roof height 129 Drummond did not think the carriages had left the rails until after the girders began to fall nor had he ever known a carriage light or heavy to be blown over by the wind 130 Findings Edit The three members of the court failed to agree a report although there was much common ground 131 Contributory factors Edit neither the foundations nor the girders were at fault the quality of the wrought iron whilst not of the best was not a factor the cast iron was also fairly good but presented difficulty in casting the workmanship and fitting of the piers were inferior in many respects the cross bracing of the piers and its fastenings were too weak to resist heavy gales Rothery complained that the cross bracing was not as substantial or as well fitted as on the Belah viaduct 132 Yolland and Barlow stated that the weight cost of cross bracing was a disproportionately small fraction of the total weight cost of ironwork 133 there was insufficiently strict supervision of the Wormit foundry a great apparent reduction of strength in the cast iron was attributable to the fastenings bringing the stress on the edges of the lugs rather than acting fairly on them 133 supervision of the bridge after completion was unsatisfactory Noble had no experience of ironwork nor any definite instruction to report on the ironwork nonetheless Noble should have reported the loose ties note 30 Using packing pieces might have fixed the piers in a distorted form the 25 miles per hour 40 km h limit had not been enforced and frequently exceeded Rothery added that given the importance to the bridge design of the test borings showing shallow bedrock Bouch should have taken greater pains and looked at the cores himself 134 True Cause of the Fall of The Bridge Edit According to Yolland and Barlow the fall of the bridge was occasioned by the insufficiency of the cross bracings and fastenings to sustain the force of the gale on the night of December 28th 1879 the bridge had been previously strained by other gales 135 Rothery agreed asking Can there be any doubt that what caused the overthrow of the bridge was the pressure of the wind acting upon a structure badly built and badly maintained 134 Substantive differences between reports Edit Yolland and Barlow also noted the possibility that failure was by fracture of a leeward column 135 Rothery felt that previous straining was partly by previous gales partly by the great speed at which trains going north were permitted to run through the high girders 134 if the momentum of a train at 25 miles per hour 40 km h hitting girders could cause the fall of the bridge what must have been the cumulative effect of the repeated braking of trains from 40 miles per hour 64 km h at the north end of the bridge 136 He therefore concluded with he claimed the support of circumstantial evidence that the bridge might well have failed at the north end first 137 he explicitly dismissed the claim that the train had hit the girders before the bridge fell 137 Yolland and Barlow concluded that the bridge had failed at the south end first and made no explicit finding as to whether the train had hit the girders 135 They noted instead that apart from Bouch himself Bouch s witnesses claimed conceded that the bridge failure was due to a shock loading on lugs heavily stressed by windloading 138 Their report is therefore consistent with either a view that the train had not hit the girder or one that a bridge with cross bracing giving an adequate safety margin against windloading would have survived a train hitting the girder Yolland and Barlow noted there is no requirement issued by the Board of Trade respecting wind pressure and there does not appear to be any understood rule in the engineering profession regarding wind pressure in railway structures and we therefore recommend the Board of Trade should take such steps as may be necessary for the establishment of rules for that purpose 139 Rothery dissented feeling that it was for the engineers themselves to arrive at an understood rule such as the French rule of 55 psf 2 6 kPa note 31 or the US 50 psf 2 4 kPa 141 Presentational differences between reports Edit Rothery s minority report is more detailed in its analysis more willing to blame named individuals and more quotable but the official report of the court is a relatively short one signed by Yolland and Barlow 142 Rothery said that his colleagues had declined to join him in allocating blame on the grounds that this was outside their terms of reference However previous Section 7 inquiries had clearly felt themselves free to blame Thorpe rail accident or exculpate Shipton on Cherwell train crash identifiable individuals as they saw fit and when Bouch s solicitor checked with Yolland and Barlow they denied that they agreed with Rothery that For these defects both in the design the construction and the maintenance Sir Thomas Bouch is in our opinion mainly to blame 143 Aftermath EditSection 7 inquiries Edit No further judicial enquiries under Section 7 of the Regulation of Railways Act 1871 were held until the Hixon rail crash in 1968 brought into question both the policy of the Railway Inspectorate towards automated level crossings and the management by the Ministry of Transport the Inspectorate s parent government department of the movement of abnormal loads A Section 7 judicial enquiry was felt necessary to give the required degree of independence 144 The structure and terms of reference were better defined than for the Tay Bridge inquiry Brian Gibbens QC was supported by two expert assessors and made findings as to blame responsibility but not as to liability culpability 145 Wind Pressure Railway Structures Commission Edit The Board of Trade set up a 5 man commission Barlow Yolland Sir John Hawkshaw Sir William Armstrong and Stokes to consider what wind loading should be assumed when designing railway bridges Windspeeds were normally measured in miles run in hour i e windspeed averaged over one hour so it was difficult to apply Smeaton s table 146 which linked wind pressure to current windspeed P t 0 005 V t 2 displaystyle P t 0 005 V t 2 nbsp where P t displaystyle P t nbsp is the instantaneous wind pressure pounds per square foot V t displaystyle V t nbsp is the instantaneous air velocity in miles per hourBy examination of recorded pressures and windspeeds at Bidston Observatory the commission found 147 that for high winds the highest wind pressure could be represented very fairly note 32 by P m 0 01 V h 2 displaystyle P m 0 01 V h 2 nbsp where P m displaystyle P m nbsp is the maximum instantaneous wind pressure experienced pounds per square foot V h displaystyle V h nbsp is the miles run in hour one hour average windspeed in miles per hourHowever they recommended that structures should be designed to withstand a wind loading of 56 psf 2 7 kPa with a safety factor of 4 2 where only gravity was relied upon They noted that higher wind pressures had been recorded at Bidston Observatory but these would still give loadings well within the recommended safety margins The wind pressures reported at Bidston were probably anomalously high because of peculiarities of the site one of the highest points on the Wirral 149 150 a wind pressure of 30 40 psf 1 4 1 9 kPa would overturn railway carriages and such events were a rarity To give a subsequent well documented example in 1903 a stationary train was overturned on the Levens viaduct but this was by a terrific gale measured at Barrow in Furness to have an average velocity of 100 miles per hour 160 km h estimated to be gusting up to 120 miles per hour 190 km h 148 Bridges Edit nbsp The current Tay Bridge at dusk with the masonry of one of Bouch s piers silhouetted against the sunlit waterA new double track Tay Bridge was built by the NBR designed by Barlow and built by William Arrol amp Co of Glasgow 18 metres 59 ft upstream of and parallel to the original bridge Work started 6 July 1883 and the bridge opened on 13 July 1887 Sir John Fowler and Sir Benjamin Baker designed the Forth Rail Bridge built also by Arrols between 1883 and 1890 Baker and his colleague Allan Stewart received the major credit for design and overseeing building work note 33 The Forth Bridge had a 40 mph speed limit which was not well observed 152 Bouch had also been engineer for the North British Arbroath and Montrose Railway which included an iron viaduct over the South Esk Examined closely after the Tay bridge collapse the viaduct as built did not match the design and many of the piers were noticeably out of the perpendicular It was suspected that the construction had not been adequately supervised foundation piles had not been driven deeply or firmly enough Tests in 1880 over a period of 36 hours using both dead and rolling loads led to the structure becoming seriously distorted and eight of the piers were declared unsafe 153 154 Condemning the structure Colonel Yolland also stated his opinion that piers constructed of cast iron columns of the dimensions used in this viaduct should not in future be sanctioned by the Board of Trade 155 It had to be dismantled and rebuilt by Sir William Arrol to a design by W R Galbraith before the line could be opened to traffic in 1881 153 156 157 Bouch s Redheugh Bridge built 1871 was condemned in 1896 the structural engineer doing so saying later that the bridge would have blown over if it had ever seen windloadings of 19 psf 0 91 kPa 158 Reminders Edit nbsp A column retrieved from the bridgeThe locomotive NBR no 224 a 4 4 0 designed by Thomas Wheatley and built at Cowlairs Works in 1871 was salvaged and repaired remaining in service until 1919 nicknamed The Diver many superstitious drivers were reluctant to take it over the new bridge 159 160 161 162 The stumps of the original bridge piers are still visible above the surface of the Tay Memorials have been placed at either end of the bridge in Dundee and Wormit 163 A column from the bridge is on display at the Dundee Museum of Transport On 28 December 2019 Dundee Walterfronts Walks hosted a remembrance walk to mark the 140 year anniversary of the Tay Bridge disaster 164 Sabbatarian response EditSome in the Sabbatarian movement which advocated for restricting activities on Sundays pointed to the disaster as a punishment from God for traveling on the Sabbath 165 James Begg a minister of the Free Church of Scotland criticized the railway stating that The Sabbath of God has been dreadfully profaned by our great public companies and also criticized the victims posing the question Is it not awful to think that they must have been carried away when many of them must have known that they were transgressing the Law of God 160 Punch magazine criticized Begg for converting the awful catastrophe triumphantly to the account of his own black and bitter creed and accused him of violating the biblical precept Judge not that ye be not judged 166 Modern reinterpretations EditVarious additional pieces of evidence have been advanced in the last 40 years leading to forensic engineering reinterpretations of what actually happened 167 168 Works of literature about the disaster Edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Tay Bridge disaster The disaster inspired several songs and poems most famously William McGonagall s The Tay Bridge Disaster widely considered to be of such a low quality as to be comical 169 The German poet Theodor Fontane shocked by the news wrote his poem Die Bruck am Tay de 170 171 It was published only ten days after the tragedy happened C Horne s ballad In Memory of the Tay Bridge Disaster was published as a broadside in May 1880 It describes the moment of the disaster as 172 The train into the girders came And loud the wind did roar A flash is seen the Bridge is broke The train is heard no more The Bridge is down the Bridge is down in words of terror spread The train is gone its living freight Are numbered with the dead See also EditDavid Kirkaldy Harry Watts List of structural failures and collapses List of bridge disasters List of wind related railway accidentsNotes and references EditNotes Edit These constituted in order from front to rear a third class carriage a first class carriage two more third class carriages and a second class carriage 14 The National Library of Scotland maintains an extensive collection of photographs of the damaged piers and recovered wreckage Maxwell an engineer thought the flashes too red to be friction sparks unless tinged by ignition of gas escaping from the town gas main on the bridge The man to whom he talked next remembered being told by this witness Barron that the bridge was in the river but not that Barron had seen it fall 29 One of 3 William Robertsons who gave evidence Provost of Dundee when the bridge opened a Justice of the Peace and partner in a major engineering firm in Dundee an engineer and therefore able to give evidence with authority Rothery a brief biography 30 can be found in the online Dictionary of Scottish Architects One light on each of the 14 piers in or bordering the navigable channel of which he had been able to see seven 32 he should have measured 85 or 90 seconds if the 25 mph 40 km h limit was being observed 60 seconds is almost 36 mph 58 km h 50 seconds almost 42 mph 68 km h the bridge had been tested at up to 40 mph 64 km h 34 A further passenger witness spoke of a prancing motion like that felt descending from Beattock Summit or Shap Summit the gradient at the north end of the bridge closely matches the ruling gradients of Beattock and Shap as counsel for the North British pointed out that motion would be due to train movement 36 They had never worked on a lattice girder bridge before from disinterested recollections of the viaducts on the Stainmore line 39 40 some noise and vibration should be expected even on well founded bridges any of these tie bars formed by two flat bars of iron are naturally a little out of line because they cross each other and if they were loose and if there was any vibration it would make one bar strike against another consequently you would have the noise of one piece of iron hitting against the other 47 The cotters are really wedges and to prevent those wedges from shaking backwards their ends are split and they are bent in that position in order to prevent them shifting up Mins of Evidence p 255 H Laws McKean Battle for the North p 142 says the cotters were cast iron but as will be obvious from the above they were wrought iron McKean goes on to comment on the failure of the Railway Inspectorate to comment on the hazards of hitting cast iron hard The experts agreed with them but pointed out that Cleveland foundries managed to produce quality castings Forming a mould around the defective lug heating that end of the column and adding molten metal to fill the mould and hopefully adequately fuse with the rest of the column 52 53 A paste made of beeswax fiddler s rosin fine iron filings and lampblack melted together poured into the hole and allowed to set A corruption of beaumontage a filler used in furniture making The nature of Beaumont egg is that it appears to be metal when rubbed with a stone 54 born 1810 65 perhaps somewhat too advanced in years for a work of this kind said Rothery According to Benjamin Baker all the difficulty is in the foundations The superstructure of the piers is ordinary everyday work 69 A later witness explained that this could not be checked at the foundry as low girder columns had no spigots 71 Law s sums appear with the wrong number and units at a crucial point on p 248 of the Minutes of Evidence the correct version would seem to be this The bars had a cross section of one point six two five square inches 10 48 cm2 which should resist more than 8 tons without exceeding 5 ton square inch the gibs an area of 0 375 square inch and would fail in compression at about 18 ton square inch i e somewhat under 7 tons For completeness the lugs total area about 10 square inches should resist up to 10 tons without exceeding the much lower design limit for cast iron under tension 1 ton square inch The bolt maker had gone bankrupt and various disgruntled workmen had alleged that the iron was bad the bolt maker s buyer bribed and the bolts untested Obituary at 86 Obituary at 87 presumably design calculations had not been kept presumably this was normal practice since the Inquiry did not comment on this the Board of Trade expectation was that tensile stress on wrought iron should not exceed 5 ton per square inch this gave a margin of at least 4 against failure and about 2 against plastic deformation 89 Sir John Hawkshaw Thomas Elliot Harrison George Parker Bidder and Barlow 92 factually correct and the bridge piers were designed without any special allowance for wind loading on Pole s sums if they had supported 200 foot span 61 metre girders they would have been within code at 20 psf 1 0 kPa and Cochrane s evidence was that the bridge if properly executed would not have failed which would apply a fortiori with 200 ft 61 m spans p 184 of Useful Rules and Tables relating to Mensuration Engineering Structures and Machines 1866 edition 1872 edition at 1 was the reference given the original publication On the Stability of Factory Chimneys p 14 in the Proceedings of the Philosophical Society of Glasgow vol IV 2 gives the authority for the high wind pressure John Pringle Nichol named in Rankine s manuscript Rankine had been Regius Professor of Civil Engineering there His most developed example was a pane of glass in a signal cabin taking the wind at near ground level at the southern shore to be the same as 80 feet 24 m above the Tay in mid firth because there was quite as much disturbance of the ballast the Inquiry rejected this assumption and therefore Baker s conclusion the pressure on the window pane was the same as the wind loading pressure not valid in the absence of any evidence that leeward windows were open both Barlow and Rothery corrected him on this 100 from work he had previously done on glass of other dimensions the pane would fail at 18 psf 0 86 kPa the inquiry did not discuss this but the sum seems over precise given the variable failure pressure of outwardly identical panes of glass 101 In 1871 at Maryhill an NBR train running at 20 25 miles per hour 32 40 km h was fouled by a traveling crane on the opposite line for details of the damage caused see 128 Yolland and Barlow say that if he had there would have been ample time to put in stronger ties and fastenings which is difficult to reconcile with the weak point having been the integrally cast lugs Used by Gustave Eiffel for the design of the Garabit viaduct 1880 although it only became an official requirement in 1891 140 The reference cited gives values for design windloading of 2395 N m2 US 2633 N m2 Garabit 2649 N m2 France 1891 onwards and 2682 N m2 UK post Tay Bridge Eiffel s value is the direct metric equivalent of Rankine s 55 psf the 1891 French code value rounds that up to a calculationally convenient figure of 270 kg m2 From observations taken at Bidston of the greatest hourly velocity and of the greatest pressure on the square foot during gales between the years 1867 and 1895 inclusive I find that the average pressure 24 readings for an hourly run of wind at seventy miles per hour 110 km h was forty five pounds per square foot 2 2 kPa Similarly the average pressure 18 readings at eighty miles per hour 130 km h was sixty pounds per square foot 2 9 kPa and that at ninety miles per hour 140 km h only 4 readings was seventy one pounds per square foot 3 4 kPa 148 the contractor did his bit Arrols were also simultaneously involved in building Tower Bridge William Arrol spent Monday and Tuesday at the Forth Bridge Wednesday at the Tay Bridge Thursday at his Glasgow works Friday and some of Saturday at Tower Bridge Sunday he took off 151 References Edit Bridge design is described intermittently in Minutes of Evidence pp 241 271 H Law the bridge design process in Minutes of Evidence pp 398 408 Sir Thomas Bouch Minutes of Evidence pp 241 271 H Law Report of Court of Inquiry Appendix 3 No 24724 The London Gazette 20 May 1879 p 3504 Mins of Ev p 440 Sir T Bouch Tay Bridge Disaster Appendix to the Report of the Court of Inquiry page 42 Retrieved 20 September 2012 Mins of Ev p 24 Captain Scott Mins of Ev p 15 James Black Lawson Mins of Ev p 33 Capt John Greig Mins of Ev p 18 George Clark Mins of Ev p 392 Robert Henry Scott MA FRS Secretary to the Meteorological Council Burt P J A 2004 The great storm and the fall of the first Tay Rail Bridge Weather 59 12 347 350 Bibcode 2004Wthr 59 347B doi 10 1256 wea 199 04 The architect of Scotland s Tay Bridge disaster The Independent 27 December 2019 Archived from the original on 26 May 2022 a b Drawing Correct Arrangement of 4 15 P M Train from Edinburgh to Dundee on 28th Decr 1879 reproduced on inside of dust cover of Thomas John 1969 The North British Railway volume 1 1st ed Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 4697 0 a b Mins of Ev p 79 John Black Mins of Ev p 7 John Watt a b Report of the Court of Inquiry page 9 Secondhand description at Mins of Ev p 5 testimony of Thomas Barclay Mins of Ev p 39 Edward Simpson Scotland s History The Tay Bridge Disaster National Records of Scotland 15 August 2016 Sheena Tait 20 December 2011 Did your ancestor die in the Tay Bridge disaster Sheena Tait Scottish Genealogy Research Retrieved 22 November 2020 Courier article to blame for Tay Bridge Disaster death toll confusion says researcher Dundee Courier 28 March 2014 Report of the Court of Inquiry page 3 Obituary at John Cochrane 1823 1891 Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 109 1892 398 399 January 1892 doi 10 1680 imotp 1892 20357 Mins of Ev p 19 Alexander Maxwell Mins of Ev p 19 William Abercrombie Clark Mins of Ev p 16 James Black Lawson Mins of Ev p 53 Peter Barron Mins of Ev p 56 Henry Gourlay William Robertson Engineer 13 August 1825 11 July 1899 Retrieved 12 February 2012 Balmore West Road Newport on Tay Retrieved 12 February 2012 Mins of Ev p 64 William Robertson Mins of Ev pp 58 59 William Robertson Mins of Ev p 373 Major General Hutchinson Mins of Ev pp 65 72 Thomas Downing Baxter speed only George Thomas Hume speed only Alexander Hutchinson speed and movement and p 88 Dr James Miller speed only Mins of Ev pp 85 87 John Leng Mins of Ev pp 72 76 James Smith Mins of Ev pp 88 97 David Pirie Peter Robertson John Milne Peter Donegany David Dale John Evans Stainmore story the viaducts Retrieved 14 February 2012 Don t Look Down the story of Belah viaduct Retrieved 14 February 2012 Mins of Ev p 91 Peter Donegany Mins of Ev p 95 John Evans Mins of Ev pp 101 103 Alexander Stewart Mins of Ev pp 124 125 Edward Simpson Mins of Ev pp 215 225 Henry Abel Noble Mins of Ev pp 409 410 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev pp 370 373 Frederic William Reeves Mins of Ev p 219 Henry Abel Noble confirmed by pp 427 429 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 103 Richard Baird Mins of Ev p 107 Richard Baird Mins of Ev p 119 David Hutton Iron Founding Uniting Cast Iron by Burning On Scientific American 21 14 211 October 1869 doi 10 1038 scientificamerican10021869 211 Tate James M Strong Melvin E 1906 Foundry Practice Second ed H W Wilson p 43 Mins of Ev p 401 Alexander Milne Mins of Ev pp 144 152 Fergus Fergusson a b Mins of Ev p 164 Gerrit Willem Camphuis Mins of Ev pp 158 163 Gerrit Willem Camphuis Mins of Ev p 208 Alexander Milne and p 211 John Gibb Mins of Ev p 185 Frank Beattie Mins of Ev p 280 Albert Groethe Mins of Ev p 298 Albert Groethe Mins of Ev p 154 Hercules Strachan a b Mins of Ev p 409 Sir Thomas Bouch a b Mins of Ev p 418 Sir Thomas Bouch 1881 census National Archive Reference RG number RG11 Piece 387 Folio 14 Page 37 details for Croft Bank West Church Perthshire a b Mins of Ev p 401 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 514 Edgar Gilkes p 370 Frederick William Reeves and p 290 Albert Groethe Mins of Ev p 135 G Macbeath Mins of Ev p 511 Benjamin Baker Mins of Ev pp 244 245 Henry Law Mins of Ev p 293 Albert Groethe Mins of Ev pp 245 246 Henry Law a b Mins of Ev p 255 Henry Law a b Mins of Ev p 247 Henry Law Mins of Ev p 419 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 252 Henry Law a b c Mins of Ev p 248 Henry Law Mins of Ev pp 341 343 John Cochrane Mins of Ev p 318 Henry Law a b c Mins of Ev p 263 Henry Law a b Mins of Ev p 345 John Cochrane Mins of Ev p 467 Dr William Pole Mins of Ev p 256 Henry Law Mins of Ev p 483 Dr William Pole Mins of Ev pp 303 304 Henry Law Allan Duncan Stewart Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 119 399 400 January 1895 doi 10 1680 imotp 1895 19862 William Pole Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 143 301 309 January 1901 doi 10 1680 imotp 1901 18876 p xiv of Appendix to Report of Inquiry a b Mins of Ev p 366 James Brunlees a b Mins of Ev p 420 Sir Thomas Bouch a b Mins of Ev p 381 Sir George Airy Mins of Ev p 405 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev pp 385 391 George Stokes Mins of Ev p 464 Dr William Pole Mins of Ev p 321 Henry Law Mins of Ev p 471 Dr William Pole Mins of Ev pp 509 10 Benjamin Baker Baker Benjamin 1884 The Forth Bridge London pp 47 ISBN 9780665008429 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Stanton T E January 1908 Experiments on Wind Pressure Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers 171 1908 175 200 doi 10 1680 imotp 1908 17333 Mins of Ev p 508 Benjamin Baker Brown W G 1970 CBD 132 Glass Thickness for Windows National Research Council Canada Institute for Research in Construction Archived from the original on 29 April 2012 a b Mins of Ev p 254 Henry Law a b Mins of Ev p 341 John Cochrane Mins of Ev p 478 Dr William Pole a b Mins of Ev p 521 Edgar Gilkes Mins of Ev p 354 John Cochrane confirmed by Edgar Gilkes Mins of Ev p 521 Mins of Ev p 351 John Cochrane Mins of Ev p 404 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 429 Sir Thomas Bouch a b c Mins of Ev p 470 Dr William Pole Mins of Ev p 468 Dr William Pole a b c Mins of Ev p 308 Henry Law Mins of Ev p 307 Henry Law a b Mins of Ev p 346 John Cochrane Mins of Ev p 512 Benjamin Baker Mins of Ev p 415 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 266 Henry Law Evidence of James Brunlees p 362 Mins of Ev Mins of Ev p 329 Henry Laws Mins of Ev p 362 James Brunlees a b Mins of Ev p 441 James Waddell Mins of Ev pp 415 6 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 423 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 430 Charles Meik Mins of Ev pp 438 9 John Holdsworth Thomas Mins of Ev p 422 Sir Thomas Bouch Mins of Ev p 443 James Waddell BoT Maryhill1871 pdf PDF Retrieved 27 March 2012 Mins of Ev pp 453 4 Dugald Drummond Mins of Ev p 459 Dugald Drummond Report of Court of Inquiry pp 15 16 unless referenced otherwise Report of Mr Rothery pp 43 4 a b Report of Court of Inquiry p 13 a b c Report of Mr Rothery pp 41 a b c Report of Court of Inquiry pp 15 16 Report of Mr Rothery p 40 a b Report of Mr Rothery p 30 Report of the Court of Inquiry p 15 Report of the Court of Inquiry p 16 L Schuermans H Porcher E Verstrynge B Rossi I Wouters 2016 On the evolution in design and calculation of steel structures over the 19th century in Belgium France and England In Koen Van Balen ed Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions Anamnesis Diagnosis Therapy Controls Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions SAHC Leuven Belgium 13 15 September 2016 Els Verstrynge CRC Press pp 606 7 ISBN 978 1 317 20662 0 Report of Mr Rothery p 49 Tay Bridge Disaster Report of the Court of Inquiry and Report of Mr Rothery PDF Retrieved 3 April 2012 Responsibility for the Accident Rothery 1880 44 RAILWAYS ACCIDENT HIXON Hansard House of Commons Debates 756 cc1782 5 17 January 1968 Retrieved 1 April 2012 Ministry of Transport 1968 Report of the Public Inquiry into the Accident at Hixon Level Crossing on January 6 1968 HMSO ISBN 978 0 10 137060 8 Smeaton Mr J 1759 An Experimental Enquiry concerning the Natural Powers of Water and Wind to Turn Mills and Other Machines Depending on a Circular Motion Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society 51 100 174 doi 10 1098 rstl 1759 0019 The main text of the Commission s report can be found at PDF Retrieved 27 February 2012 a b Accident report Levens Viaduct 1903 Natural Areas and Greenspaces Bidston Hill Metropolitan Borough of Wirral Archived from the original on 9 December 2010 Retrieved 13 June 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Kemble Mike The Wirral Hundred The Wirral Peninsula Archived from the original on 4 July 2007 Retrieved 12 August 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Thomas John 1975 The North British Railway Volume Two Newton Abbott David amp Charles p 224 ISBN 978 0 7153 6699 8 p 29 J Thomas op cit a b Historic Environment Scotland Railway Viaducts over South Esk River Category B Listed Building LB49864 Retrieved 25 March 2019 Condemnation of a Railway Viaduct Thames Star 17 January 1881 Colonel Yolland s Report on the Southesk Viaduct Dundee Advertiser 18 December 1880 pp 6 7 Montrose South Esk Viaduct Canmore Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland Retrieved 1 April 2013 Montrose Ferryden Viaduct Canmore Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland Retrieved 1 April 2013 Moncrieff John Mitchell January 1923 Discussion Wind Pressures and Stresses Caused by the Wind on Bridges Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers Part 2 216 1923 34 56 doi 10 1680 imotp 1923 14462 Highet Campbell 1970 Scottish Locomotive History 1831 1923 London George Allen amp Unwin p 89 ISBN 978 0 04 625004 1 a b Prebble John 1959 1956 The High Girders London Pan pp 164 188 ISBN 978 0 330 02162 3 Rolt L T C Kichenside Geoffrey M 1982 1955 Red for Danger 4th ed Newton Abbot David amp Charles pp 98 101 102 ISBN 978 0 7153 8362 9 Locomotives of the North British Railway 1846 1882 Stephenson Locomotive Society 1970 p 66 BBC 28 December 2013 BBC Memorials for those killed in Tay Bridge disaster BBC Anniversary walk to commemorate Tay Bridge Disaster taking place this weekend Evening Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 24 September 2020 Paterson Michael 2008 A Brief History of Life in Victorian Britain Robinson p 161 ISBN 978 1845297077 Graves Charles Larcom 1921 Mr Punch s History of Modern England Vol III 1874 1892 OU on the BBC Forensic Engineering The Tay Bridge Disaster Archived from the original on 25 December 2021 Retrieved 3 April 2012 Lewis Peter R Reynolds Ken Forensic engineering a reappraisal of the Tay Bridge disaster PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 March 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2019 National Library of Scotland 2004 Broadside ballad entitled In Memory of the Tay Bridge Disaster National Library of Scotland Retrieved 22 February 2014 Edward C Smith III The Collapse of the Tay Bridge Theodor Fontane William McGonagall and the Poetic Response to the Humanity s First Technologocal Disaster In Ray Broadus Browne ed Arthur G Neal ed Ordinary Reactions to Extraordinary Events Popular Press Ohio State University 2001 ISBN 9780879728342 pp 182 193 German text on Wikitexts and translation at Bartelby com Horne C 1880 In Memory of the Tay Bridge Disaster Bibliography Edit Lewis Peter R Beautiful Railway Bridge of the Silvery Tay Reinvestigating the Tay Bridge Disaster of 1879 Tempus 2004 ISBN 0 7524 3160 9 Lewis Peter R Disaster on the Dee Robert Stephenson s Nemesis of 1847 Tempus Publishing 2007 ISBN 978 0 7524 4266 2 Lumley Robin 2013 Tay Bridge Disaster The People s Story Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 9946 8 McKean Charles Battle for the North The Tay and Forth Bridges and the 19th Century Railway Wars The Building of the Tay and Forth Bridges and the 19th Century Railway Wars Granta 2007 Pease Joseph et al Report from the Select Committee on the North British Railway Tay Bridge Bill Together with the Proceedings of the Committee and Minutes of Evidence London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1880 Prebble John The High Girders The Story of the Tay Bridge Disaster 1956 published by Penguin Books in 1975 ISBN 0 14 004590 2 Rapley John Thomas Bouch the Builder of the Tay Bridge Stroud Tempus 2006 ISBN 0 7524 3695 3 Rothery Henry Tay Bridge Disaster Report Of The Court of Inquiry and Report Of Mr Rothery Upon the Circumstances Attending the Fall of a Portion of the Tay Bridge on the 28th December 1879 London Her Majesty s Stationery Office 1880 OCLC 30875567 Swinfen David The Fall of the Tay Bridge Mercat Press 1998 ISBN 1 873644 34 5 Thomas John The Tay Bridge Disaster New Light on the 1879 Tragedy David amp Charles 1972 ISBN 0 7153 5198 2 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tay Bridge disaster 91 black and white photographs of the wrecked piers of the Tay Bridge showing destroyed piers and girders wreckage of train and steam engine from National Library of Scotland Tom Martin s engineering analysis of the bridge disaster Reappraisal of the Tay Bridge disaster Open University The Tay Bridge Disaster at Failure Magazine Dundee local history centre page on the disaster Tay Victims listing reference only Firth of Tay Bridge Disaster 1879 Worst Structural Disaster in British History at Suburban Emergency Management Project Tay Bridge Disaster Appendix to the Report Of The Court of Inquiry Includes a large number of drawings of the bridge and calculations of the result of wind pressure on the structure Report from the Select Committee on the North British Railway Tay Bridge Bill together with the Proceedings of the Committee and Mins of Ev All the oral evidence given reproduced verbatim a very large file but sometimes a useful corrective to reinterpretation by secondary sources The Tay Bridge Collection at Archive Services University of Dundee Was Disaster Built into the First Tay Bridge Article relating to the University of Dundee s holdings on the disaster 56 26 14 4 N 2 59 18 4 W 56 437333 N 2 988444 W 56 437333 2 988444 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tay Bridge disaster amp oldid 1176775674, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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