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Crash at Crush

The Crash at Crush was a one-day publicity stunt in the U.S. state of Texas that took place on September 15, 1896, in which two uncrewed locomotives were crashed into each other head-on at high speed. William George Crush, general passenger agent of the Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad, conceived the idea in order to demonstrate a staged train wreck as a public spectacle. No admission was charged, and train fares to the crash site – called Crush, set up as a temporary destination for the event – were offered at the reduced rate of US$3.50 in 1896 (equivalent to $125.35 in 2023) from any location in Texas.

Crash at Crush
The locomotive boilers explode during impact
DateSeptember 15, 1896 (1896-09-15)
Location"Crush", McLennan County, Texas, United States
Coordinates31°44′42″N 97°05′58″W / 31.74510°N 97.09957°W / 31.74510; -97.09957
TypeTrain wreck publicity stunt
Organized byMissouri, Kansas and Texas Railway
Deaths2
Non-fatal injuries6+

As a result, an estimated 40,000 people – more people than the second-largest city in state at the time – attended the event. Unexpectedly, the impact caused both engine boilers to explode, resulting in a shower of flying debris that killed two people[1] and caused numerous injuries among the spectators.

Preparations Edit

The Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad (popularly known as the "Katy", from its "M-K-T" initials) had first reached the Crush area in the 1880s, during the construction of a route between Dallas and Houston. As the railroad expanded, the Katy replaced its 30-ton steam engines with newer, more powerful 60-ton engines, and subsequently a stockpile of the older units, for which the railroad now had no use, began to accumulate.

In 1896, Katy agent William Crush proposed a publicity stunt that could make use of the obsolete Katy trains to be held along the Dallas–Houston route at a site 14 miles (23 km) north of Waco and 3 miles (4.8 km) south of the town of West, in McLennan County.

A locomotive crash staged by the Columbus and Hocking Valley Railroad at Buckeye Park near Lancaster, Ohio on May 30, 1896 had been a huge success. Buckeye Park was established and owned by the railroad to entice residents of nearby Columbus to take weekend excursions. The locomotive crash was planned for the park's annual opening day and drew approximately 20,000 spectators. While no admission was charged, money was made on the railroad passenger traffic to and from the park.[2]

Crush imagined a similar spectacle for which Katy could advertise to thousands of potential passengers. Crush's superiors agreed to his proposal and put him in charge of the project. As with the crash at Buckeye Park, the event would be free of charge, instead profiting from the sale of tickets on special excursion trains that would run to and from the site. The price was US$ 3.50 in 1896 (equivalent to $125.35 in 2023) per round-trip ticket from anywhere in the state.

 
The locomotives meet at about 5 pm for publicity photos

Two water wells were drilled at the site and a circus tent from Ringling Brothers was erected, as well as a grandstand, three speakers' stands, a platform for reporters, two telegraph offices, and a special train depot, over which a giant sign proclaimed the new town as "Crush, Texas".[3][4] Events from the Midway Plaisance, including lemonade stands, carnival games,[5] medicine shows, cigar vendors and other sideshows[6] were highly anticipated, with a construction foreman saying that "This feature alone will be worth going to Crush to see."[7] A separate four-mile segment of track was built for the event alongside the Katy railroad so that there was no chance a runaway train could end up on the main line; each end of the track was situated atop a low hill on opposite sides of a bowl-shaped valley in which the trains would meet. The locomotives to be used were two 35-short-ton (32 t) decommissioned Baldwin engines, No. 999 and No. 1001.[4]

Safety precautions Edit

On the day before the exhibition, railroad officials staged a speed test of the engines to help predict the precise point of collision. Katy engineers assured Crush that his grand idea was safe, specifically that the boilers on the steam engines had been designed to resist ruptures and that, even in a very high-speed crash, they were unlikely to explode. Each engine would pull six boxcars behind it; because the couplers used to link the cars were considered unreliable, the cars were chained together to prevent them from coming apart during the impact.[8]

Crush insisted on restricting the general public to a minimum of 200 yards (180 m) away from the track, but allowed members of the press to be within 100 yards. Katy officials expected a crowd of between 20,000 and 25,000 people to attend, but the clever marketing ploy was an overwhelming success and the railroad sold out more than 30 special excursion trains to the event.[3]

Crash Edit

 
The moment of impact. Photographer Joe Deane was blinded in one eye by a flying bolt immediately after taking this photograph.[9]

The crash was delayed for an hour because the crowd resisted being pressed back by the police to what was supposedly a safe distance. At about 5 pm, the two trains, pulling cars loaded with railroad ties, slowly met in the middle of the track to be photographed. They were then rolled to their starting points at the opposite ends of the track.[3] Crush, riding a white charger, signaled the start of the main event. The engineers and crew aboard each train opened the steam to a prearranged setting, rode for exactly four turns of the driving wheels, and then jumped from the trains. The September 16 issue of The Dallas Morning News described what happened next:

The rumble of the two trains, faint and far off at first, but growing nearer and more distinct with each fleeting second, was like the gathering force of a cyclone. Nearer and nearer they came, the whistles of each blowing repeatedly and the torpedoes which had been placed on the track exploding in almost a continuous round like the rattle of musketry... They rolled down at a frightful rate of speed to within a quarter of a mile of each other. Nearer and nearer as they approached the fatal meeting place the rumbling increased, the roaring grew louder...[10]

Each train reached a speed of about 45 miles per hour (72 km/h) by the time they met near the anticipated spot, though some observers believed they were traveling much faster. Shortly after the trains collided, there was a large explosion:

A crash, a sound of timbers rent and torn, and then a shower of splinters... There was just a swift instance of silence, and then as if controlled by a single impulse both boilers exploded simultaneously and the air was filled with flying missiles of iron and steel varying in size from a postage stamp to half of a driving wheel...[10]

 
The crowd explores the wreckage

Debris was blown hundreds of feet into the air.[3] Panic quickly broke out as the crowd turned and ran. Some of the debris came down among the spectators, killing two and seriously injuring at least six others.[6] A photographer, Jarvis "Joe" Deane of Waco, lost one eye to a flying bolt.[11] The locomotives and their boxcars were reduced to scraps of wood and steel:

All that remained of the two engines and twelve cars was a smoking mass of fractured metal and kindling wood, except one car on the rear of each train, which had been left untouched. The engines had both been completely telescoped, and contrary to experience in such cases, instead of rising in the air from the force of the blow, were just flattened out. There was nothing about the cars big enough to save except pieces of wood, which were eagerly seized upon and carried home as souvenirs.[10]

Aftermath Edit

The story made national headlines, and Crush was immediately fired from the Katy Railroad.[12] In light of a lack of negative publicity, however, he was rehired the next day and continued to work for the company until his retirement, in a career spanning six decades.[13] The Katy Railroad quickly settled several lawsuits from the victims' families with cash and lifetime rail passes; the injured photographer received damages amounting to US$ 10000 in 1896 (equivalent of $358,142.86 in 2023). Though the incident had resulted in tragedy, the Katy benefited enormously from the attention it received, including international recognition.[7] Despite the disaster, many railroads continued to stage locomotive collisions in the following years.[14]

Ragtime composer Scott Joplin, who was performing in the region at the time, composed a piano piece he called the "Great Crush Collision March" to commemorate the crash; the composition was dedicated to the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railway. It was copyrighted on October 15, 1896, a month after the event.[15] The piece was notable because it included instructions in the score for how to replicate the sounds of the trains' collision through playing techniques, specific notes, and the use of dynamics.[16]

In 1976, the Texas Historical Commission erected a historical marker (number 5315) a few miles from the site in West, Texas.[17][18]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Terri Jo Ryan. "Crash at Crush". Retrieved September 15, 2006.
  2. ^ Joyce Harvey. "Buckeye Park and a demolition derby on steroids". Retrieved September 22, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d Allen Lee Hamilton. "." Handbook of Texas Online, University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved on 2007-04-15.
  4. ^ a b Ramos, Mary G. (1993). . Texas Almanac. Texas State Historical Association. Archived from the original on 2006-11-19.
  5. ^ Morales, Carlos E. "At 120 Years, The Crash at Crush Remains Stranger than Fiction". Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  6. ^ a b "Crash at Crush | Waco History". Waco History. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  7. ^ a b Boissoneault, Lorraine. "A Train Company Crashed Two Trains. You Will Believe What Happened Next". Smithsonian. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  8. ^ Krystek, Lee (2005). "The Great Texas Train Crash at Crush". The Museum of Unnatural Mystery.
  9. ^ "The Crush Texas Train Crash of 1896". 30 July 2014.
  10. ^ a b c The Dallas Morning News. September 16, 1896.
  11. ^ Perfesser Bill site. 2009-06-06 at the Wayback Machine See also the Crash at Crush historical marker (accessed 2012-09-15).
  12. ^ Bills, E. R. Texas Obscurities: Stories of the Peculiar, Exceptional & Nefarious. Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2013.
  13. ^ Masterson, Vincent V. The Katy Railroad and the Last Frontier, (Google Books), University of Missouri Press, 1988, p. 272, (ISBN 0826206689). Retrieved 26 May 2007.
  14. ^ "Train Set". 99% Invisible. 10 May 2022. Retrieved 2022-06-03.
  15. ^ Scott Joplin, "The Great Crush Collision March" sheet music (Temple, TX: John R. Fuller, 1896). See Bill Edwards, Rags and Pieces by Scott Joplin. 2009-06-06 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ "Scott Joplin's 'Great Crush Collision March' and the Memorialization of a Marketing Spectacle" post from the Baylor University Libraries Digital Collections blog". Retrieved April 19, 2012.
  17. ^ Boissoneault, Lorraine (July 28, 2017). "A Train Company Crashed Two Trains. You Will Believe What Happened Next". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 17 September 2020.
  18. ^ "The Crash at Crush Historical Marker". www.hmdb.org.

Further reading Edit

  • . KATY Employes' Magazine. September 1950. Archived from the original on 2009-02-17.
  • Ward, George B. The Crash at Crush: Texas' Great Pre-arranged Train Wreck. M.A. thesis, University of Texas at Austin, May 1975.
  • Ramos, Mary G. (1993). . Texas Almanac. Texas State Historical Association. Archived from the original on 2006-11-19.
  • Krystek, Lee (2005). "The Great Texas Train Crash at Crush". The Museum of Unnatural Mystery.
  • Sanders, J.R. (2010). "Crush's Locomotive Crash Was a Monster Smash". Wild West Magazine.
  • Swartz, Clay. "The Crash at Crush". Cowboys & Indians. p. 114–118. August/September 2014.
  • Braswell, Sean. "Staging a Texas-Size Train Disaster." Ozy. Staging a Texas-Size Train Disaster for Fun and Profit
  • Cox, Mike (2019). "Train Crash at Crush, Texas: America's Deadliest Publicity Stunt (Disaster)". The History Press.

crash, crush, publicity, stunt, state, texas, that, took, place, september, 1896, which, uncrewed, locomotives, were, crashed, into, each, other, head, high, speed, william, george, crush, general, passenger, agent, missouri, kansas, texas, railroad, conceived. The Crash at Crush was a one day publicity stunt in the U S state of Texas that took place on September 15 1896 in which two uncrewed locomotives were crashed into each other head on at high speed William George Crush general passenger agent of the Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad conceived the idea in order to demonstrate a staged train wreck as a public spectacle No admission was charged and train fares to the crash site called Crush set up as a temporary destination for the event were offered at the reduced rate of US 3 50 in 1896 equivalent to 125 35 in 2023 from any location in Texas Crash at CrushThe locomotive boilers explode during impactDateSeptember 15 1896 1896 09 15 Location Crush McLennan County Texas United StatesCoordinates31 44 42 N 97 05 58 W 31 74510 N 97 09957 W 31 74510 97 09957TypeTrain wreck publicity stuntOrganized byMissouri Kansas and Texas RailwayDeaths2Non fatal injuries6 As a result an estimated 40 000 people more people than the second largest city in state at the time attended the event Unexpectedly the impact caused both engine boilers to explode resulting in a shower of flying debris that killed two people 1 and caused numerous injuries among the spectators Contents 1 Preparations 1 1 Safety precautions 2 Crash 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingPreparations EditThe Missouri Kansas Texas Railroad popularly known as the Katy from its M K T initials had first reached the Crush area in the 1880s during the construction of a route between Dallas and Houston As the railroad expanded the Katy replaced its 30 ton steam engines with newer more powerful 60 ton engines and subsequently a stockpile of the older units for which the railroad now had no use began to accumulate In 1896 Katy agent William Crush proposed a publicity stunt that could make use of the obsolete Katy trains to be held along the Dallas Houston route at a site 14 miles 23 km north of Waco and 3 miles 4 8 km south of the town of West in McLennan County A locomotive crash staged by the Columbus and Hocking Valley Railroad at Buckeye Park near Lancaster Ohio on May 30 1896 had been a huge success Buckeye Park was established and owned by the railroad to entice residents of nearby Columbus to take weekend excursions The locomotive crash was planned for the park s annual opening day and drew approximately 20 000 spectators While no admission was charged money was made on the railroad passenger traffic to and from the park 2 Crush imagined a similar spectacle for which Katy could advertise to thousands of potential passengers Crush s superiors agreed to his proposal and put him in charge of the project As with the crash at Buckeye Park the event would be free of charge instead profiting from the sale of tickets on special excursion trains that would run to and from the site The price was US 3 50 in 1896 equivalent to 125 35 in 2023 per round trip ticket from anywhere in the state The locomotives meet at about 5 pm for publicity photosTwo water wells were drilled at the site and a circus tent from Ringling Brothers was erected as well as a grandstand three speakers stands a platform for reporters two telegraph offices and a special train depot over which a giant sign proclaimed the new town as Crush Texas 3 4 Events from the Midway Plaisance including lemonade stands carnival games 5 medicine shows cigar vendors and other sideshows 6 were highly anticipated with a construction foreman saying that This feature alone will be worth going to Crush to see 7 A separate four mile segment of track was built for the event alongside the Katy railroad so that there was no chance a runaway train could end up on the main line each end of the track was situated atop a low hill on opposite sides of a bowl shaped valley in which the trains would meet The locomotives to be used were two 35 short ton 32 t decommissioned Baldwin engines No 999 and No 1001 4 Safety precautions Edit On the day before the exhibition railroad officials staged a speed test of the engines to help predict the precise point of collision Katy engineers assured Crush that his grand idea was safe specifically that the boilers on the steam engines had been designed to resist ruptures and that even in a very high speed crash they were unlikely to explode Each engine would pull six boxcars behind it because the couplers used to link the cars were considered unreliable the cars were chained together to prevent them from coming apart during the impact 8 Crush insisted on restricting the general public to a minimum of 200 yards 180 m away from the track but allowed members of the press to be within 100 yards Katy officials expected a crowd of between 20 000 and 25 000 people to attend but the clever marketing ploy was an overwhelming success and the railroad sold out more than 30 special excursion trains to the event 3 Crash Edit The moment of impact Photographer Joe Deane was blinded in one eye by a flying bolt immediately after taking this photograph 9 The crash was delayed for an hour because the crowd resisted being pressed back by the police to what was supposedly a safe distance At about 5 pm the two trains pulling cars loaded with railroad ties slowly met in the middle of the track to be photographed They were then rolled to their starting points at the opposite ends of the track 3 Crush riding a white charger signaled the start of the main event The engineers and crew aboard each train opened the steam to a prearranged setting rode for exactly four turns of the driving wheels and then jumped from the trains The September 16 issue of The Dallas Morning News described what happened next The rumble of the two trains faint and far off at first but growing nearer and more distinct with each fleeting second was like the gathering force of a cyclone Nearer and nearer they came the whistles of each blowing repeatedly and the torpedoes which had been placed on the track exploding in almost a continuous round like the rattle of musketry They rolled down at a frightful rate of speed to within a quarter of a mile of each other Nearer and nearer as they approached the fatal meeting place the rumbling increased the roaring grew louder 10 Each train reached a speed of about 45 miles per hour 72 km h by the time they met near the anticipated spot though some observers believed they were traveling much faster Shortly after the trains collided there was a large explosion A crash a sound of timbers rent and torn and then a shower of splinters There was just a swift instance of silence and then as if controlled by a single impulse both boilers exploded simultaneously and the air was filled with flying missiles of iron and steel varying in size from a postage stamp to half of a driving wheel 10 The crowd explores the wreckageDebris was blown hundreds of feet into the air 3 Panic quickly broke out as the crowd turned and ran Some of the debris came down among the spectators killing two and seriously injuring at least six others 6 A photographer Jarvis Joe Deane of Waco lost one eye to a flying bolt 11 The locomotives and their boxcars were reduced to scraps of wood and steel All that remained of the two engines and twelve cars was a smoking mass of fractured metal and kindling wood except one car on the rear of each train which had been left untouched The engines had both been completely telescoped and contrary to experience in such cases instead of rising in the air from the force of the blow were just flattened out There was nothing about the cars big enough to save except pieces of wood which were eagerly seized upon and carried home as souvenirs 10 Aftermath EditThe story made national headlines and Crush was immediately fired from the Katy Railroad 12 In light of a lack of negative publicity however he was rehired the next day and continued to work for the company until his retirement in a career spanning six decades 13 The Katy Railroad quickly settled several lawsuits from the victims families with cash and lifetime rail passes the injured photographer received damages amounting to US 10000 in 1896 equivalent of 358 142 86 in 2023 Though the incident had resulted in tragedy the Katy benefited enormously from the attention it received including international recognition 7 Despite the disaster many railroads continued to stage locomotive collisions in the following years 14 Ragtime composer Scott Joplin who was performing in the region at the time composed a piano piece he called the Great Crush Collision March to commemorate the crash the composition was dedicated to the Missouri Kansas Texas Railway It was copyrighted on October 15 1896 a month after the event 15 The piece was notable because it included instructions in the score for how to replicate the sounds of the trains collision through playing techniques specific notes and the use of dynamics 16 In 1976 the Texas Historical Commission erected a historical marker number 5315 a few miles from the site in West Texas 17 18 See also EditBoiler explosion List of train songsReferences Edit Terri Jo Ryan Crash at Crush Retrieved September 15 2006 Joyce Harvey Buckeye Park and a demolition derby on steroids Retrieved September 22 2020 a b c d Allen Lee Hamilton Crash at Crush Archived Handbook of Texas Online University of Texas at Austin Retrieved on 2007 04 15 a b Ramos Mary G 1993 The Crash at Crush Texas Almanac Texas State Historical Association Archived from the original on 2006 11 19 Morales Carlos E At 120 Years The Crash at Crush Remains Stranger than Fiction Retrieved 2017 10 30 a b Crash at Crush Waco History Waco History Retrieved 2017 10 30 a b Boissoneault Lorraine A Train Company Crashed Two Trains You Will Believe What Happened Next Smithsonian Retrieved 2017 10 30 Krystek Lee 2005 The Great Texas Train Crash at Crush The Museum of Unnatural Mystery The Crush Texas Train Crash of 1896 30 July 2014 a b c The Dallas Morning News September 16 1896 Perfesser Bill site Archived 2009 06 06 at the Wayback Machine See also the Crash at Crush historical marker accessed 2012 09 15 Bills E R Texas Obscurities Stories of the Peculiar Exceptional amp Nefarious Charleston SC The History Press 2013 Masterson Vincent V The Katy Railroad and the Last Frontier Google Books University of Missouri Press 1988 p 272 ISBN 0826206689 Retrieved 26 May 2007 Train Set 99 Invisible 10 May 2022 Retrieved 2022 06 03 Scott Joplin The Great Crush Collision March sheet music Temple TX John R Fuller 1896 See Bill Edwards Rags and Pieces by Scott Joplin Archived 2009 06 06 at the Wayback Machine Scott Joplin s Great Crush Collision March and the Memorialization of a Marketing Spectacle post from the Baylor University Libraries Digital Collections blog Retrieved April 19 2012 Boissoneault Lorraine July 28 2017 A Train Company Crashed Two Trains You Will Believe What Happened Next Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 17 September 2020 The Crash at Crush Historical Marker www hmdb org Further reading Edit Retired Katy Engineer Tells of Wreck at Crush KATY Employes Magazine September 1950 Archived from the original on 2009 02 17 Ward George B The Crash at Crush Texas Great Pre arranged Train Wreck M A thesis University of Texas at Austin May 1975 Ramos Mary G 1993 The Crash at Crush Texas Almanac Texas State Historical Association Archived from the original on 2006 11 19 Krystek Lee 2005 The Great Texas Train Crash at Crush The Museum of Unnatural Mystery Sanders J R 2010 Crush s Locomotive Crash Was a Monster Smash Wild West Magazine Swartz Clay The Crash at Crush Cowboys amp Indians p 114 118 August September 2014 Braswell Sean Staging a Texas Size Train Disaster Ozy Staging a Texas Size Train Disaster for Fun and Profit Cox Mike 2019 Train Crash at Crush Texas America s Deadliest Publicity Stunt Disaster The History Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crash at Crush amp oldid 1158669417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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