Rescuers responded from Little Falls,
Herkimer,
Utica,
Ilion and other nearby towns. Bonfires were set for illumination and
acetylene torches were used to free victims. Rescue operations were made more difficult by rain, sleet and snow that began in the early morning hours of April 20. Injured victims were sent to hospitals in Little Falls,
Frankfort, Herkimer, Utica, and Ilion as well as to hotels, private homes and churches. The
New York State Police estimated that 4,000 people converged at the scene. Wreckage blocked direct vehicular access to the crash site, requiring rescuers to take a three-mile () detour between the site and the hospital a half-mile (800 m) away. At the state capitol,
Governor Herbert H. Lehman directed the State Police and Public Works employees to "give all possible aid". The last body was pulled from the wreckage on April 21. Thirty-five
Chinese nationals en route to
San Francisco in the custody of a
United States Marshal, who were being
deported for entering the US illegally, were in the last car and were uninjured. (Another source says they were being transported to Canada, from where they entered the US.) Dozens of other trains were delayed in the days following the wreck; the site was bypassed by routing trains, including the
20th Century Limited, the
Commodore Vanderbilt, and the
Water Level Limited between Utica and
Schenectady over
West Shore Railroad tracks. ==Casualties and reporting==