Accidents
This page will contain details of the main accidents recorded on the railway. The
main source of accidents was the proliferation of ungated level crossings, which
were specially dangerous in the dark. Warning signs were unlit. Health & Safety left
a bit to be desired in those days!
- A fatal accident at Worle in 1903 left two ladies dead and four people injured when
the train ran into a wagonette at the crossing. See report from the Weston-Super-Mare
Gazette.
- The small Drewry Railcar was struck by a Bristol Tramways coach on the Bristol Road
crossing on 19 March 1932. Four people in the coach and two in the railcar were hurt.
- A small bridge over a rhyne collapsed under the weight of Hesperus on 5 April 1934
on the line to the jetty. There were no fatalities and the engine wasn’t badly damaged.
- The small Railcar collided with a brewer’s van on the Locking Road crossing in Septemeber
1937. It is believed there were no serious injuries.
- A lorry struck a Railcar in October 1937 at the ungated Worle crossing. A passenger
was fatally injured.
- On 7 September 1938 the 2 pm train from Clevedon to Weston, consisting of four coaches
and an engine running bunker-first (No 4?) was in collision with a motorbike ridden
by two young men from Weston-Super-Mare at the ungated Worle crossing. The motorbike
was travelling at 20 to 30 mph, and the driver had his head turned away from the
direction of the oncoming train as if talking to his pillion-passenger, and was probably
unaware of the danger. Both men were killed. A bus-driver who pulled up to render
aid tragically discovered that one of the victims was his son. See Christopher Redwood’s
book.
- There were also a number of minor derailments and several cases of cattle or horses
being killed.
This subject is still being researched. More details to follow - watch this space.