On 10 December 1937 at 4:37 p.m., the 4:03 p.m.
Edinburgh Waverley to
Glasgow Queen Street express train collided at Castlecary station with the late-running 2:00 p.m. express train from
Dundee to Glasgow Queen Street on the
Edinburgh to
Glasgow main line of the
London and North Eastern Railway (LNER), killing 35 people. Snow was falling at the time of the accident. The Edinburgh train hit the rear of the standing Dundee train at an estimated . Due to the confines of the location, the rear four coaches of the Dundee train disintegrated completely. The engine of the Dundee train, an
LNER Class D29 № 9896
Dandie Dinmont, was pushed forward . The
locomotive of the Edinburgh train,
LNER Class A3 № 2744
Grand Parade, was damaged beyond repair (and was replaced by a new engine with the same number and name in April 1938).
Aftermath The death toll was 35, and 179 people were hurt, of whom 24 were detained in hospital.
The Scotsman published a detailed list of all the killed and injured
. An eight-year-old girl was counted as missing (some locals swore to seeing her ghost for many years). The driver of the Edinburgh train was committed to court on a charge of
culpable homicide (the Scottish equivalent of manslaughter) for supposedly driving too fast for the weather conditions, but the charge was dropped. The Inspecting Officer concluded that it was the signalman who was principally at fault for the disaster. This was Britain's worst snow-related rail crash, others of note being
Elliot Junction in 1906 and
Abbots Ripton in 1876. A full length part animated, part documentary film about the incident and its effects was made in 2020.
Causes At around the time of the accident, snow was falling, but the signalman at Castlecary claimed that it did not affect visibility to the extent of needing to take any special precautions. A set of
points ahead had been blocked by snow and caused several trains to back up, and the Castlecary home
signal was therefore at "danger". The Dundee train ran past the signal, and the signalman at Castlecary thought it was not going to stop at all, and therefore telegraphed "train running away" to the next signal box. In fact the train stopped 325 yards beyond the home signal. The Castlecary signalman failed to check the Dundee train's whereabouts, and also failed to consider that a train running past the home signal at danger might indicate some fault with the signals, and allowed the following Edinburgh train into the section. Shortly before the Edinburgh train arrived, the fireman of the Dundee train entered the signal box to say that the Dundee train had stopped just beyond the platform. The signalman now knew that the line was not clear and made a last-minute attempt to stop the Edinburgh train, but this also ran past the home signal and collided with the Dundee train. The drivers of both trains survived, and both claimed that the Castlecary
distant signal was showing "clear". The inspecting officer was not able to verify this, and placed the blame on the Castlecary signalman for accepting the Edinburgh train without first ascertaining what had become of the Dundee train. == 1968 accident ==