The
FFV, the Chesapeake & Ohio's luxury passenger train, was heading east to
Washington, D.C. in the early morning of 23 October 1890 when it struck a rockslide three miles outside Hinton in
Summers County, West Virginia. The train's 30-year-old engineer George Alley tried to stop, but the engine overturned, and he was trapped in the wreckage. Severely scalded, Alley died five hours later. His two firemen, both of whom leapt from the engine, were also scalded but survived. Remarkably, no passengers were injured. Apart from the basic story, the song deviates widely from the facts associated with the accident. For example, Alley's mother did not come to his side as he was dying (she had died years earlier); Alley's hair was black, not blonde; the train's fireman had no part in causing the crash; and among other differences, the engine's number was 134, not 143. Meanwhile, there is no evidence Alley was speeding to make up lost time. In fact, the young engineer, whose father and four brothers all worked for the C. & O., was hailed a hero for his attempt to prevent the crash. ==Recordings==