James Holmes was the
signalman at Manor House signal box. The day before the crash, his infant daughter Rose was taken ill and later died; Holmes was extremely distressed, having remained awake through the night ministering to the child, walking miles to try to find the local doctor (who was away from home attending to another patient) and later comforting his distraught wife. He reported to the stationmaster at
Otterington, Thomas Kirby, that he would be unable to work the shift on the next night, but Kirby merely asked his superiors for a relief signalman, without stating that the reason was Holmes had reported himself unfit to work. The Assistant District Signals Inspector at York, already harassed by other emergencies, replied that there was no relief signalman available, and his superior later concurred. Forced to complete his shift, Holmes called at the Otterington signal box before walking to Manor House and asked the signalman there, Henry Eden, to notify him when the passenger train from
York arrived at 8:58 pm; Holmes was expecting his mother to arrive by that service, having telegraphed asking for her to come and tend to his wife as he worked. He had expected his mother to arrive on either the 6:00 pm train or the 7:37 pm train, and had walked to the station on both occasions hoping to meet her, which added to his fatigue; by this point, Holmes had been awake for more than 36 hours, and confided in Eden that he was already exhausted. It was night with a thick mist which later thickened to fog. having now been awake for more than 46 hours. The goods train came to a halt just outside his signal box. Thirteen minutes later, Holmes awoke, rather confused. Henry Eden at the Otterington signal box warned him to be ready for the second part of the express, and Holmes saw that his instruments still indicated that there was a train on the line. He had forgotten about the goods train, and thought he had fallen asleep before clearing the instruments after the first express. He cleared the instruments and accepted the second express. He then had second thoughts and telegraphed the Otterington signal box (using the "speaking instrument", an old term for the single needle telegraph, not to be confused with a telephone), but too late for Eden to halt the express. The express crashed at into the goods train, which had only just started to move off at walking pace. Nine passengers and the guard of the goods train were killed. 39 other passengers and 4 train crew were injured. Nearly an hour later, hot coals from the
firebox of the engine of the express train set the wreckage on fire. The express train's
Pintsch oil gas lighting system acted as an
accelerant and added to the fire. ==Aftermath==