Underneath the arches...
article by: Ian Crowder

Stanway viaduct collapse in 1903

Tracklaying on Stanway Viaduct in 2005
…at Stanway Viaduct would not have been a good place to be on
the wet morning of fateful Friday 13th November, 1903. For on this
day disaster struck while the 15-arch, 42ft high, gently curving
viaduct was being constructed. At 8.15, without warning, no. 10
arch, which had been completed a few days earlier, collapsed soon
after its timber supports had been removed.
As it descended on to the sodden meadow below it brought down
with it a 14-ton steam crane, which was lifting materials from
ground level. The noise was heard over a mile away, according to
local newspaper reports, and it brought workers rushing over
immediately to help rescue anyone who might be trapped under the
debris.
Miraculously, the driver of the steam crane - a man named Smith
- survived and he was placed under arch no. 9 while the rescuers
continued to retrieve a trapped worker.
But while this was going on, arch no. 9 collapsed equally
suddenly, again burying the unfortunate Mr. Smith. While he was
being dug out, arch no. 8 then collapsed. Mr Smith was still alive
when he emerged from the chaos but, perhaps unsurprisingly, he
later died from his injuries after he was taken to Winchcombe
hospital. Three other men died in the disaster and seven were
injured.
In fact, the casualty figure could have been greater. Some
casual labourers had spent the night under the arches, leaving
shortly before the disaster. And had the arch collapsed half an
hour later, it would have fallen on top of the navvies who were in
the habit of having their breakfast break at around 8.30,
sheltering beneath those same arches.
According to Audie Baker's excellent but unfortunately out of
print book 'An illustrated history of the Straford on Avon to
Cheltenham Railway' (Irewell Press, ISBN 1-871608-62-7 - second
hand copies can be found or borrow it from a library) one man had a
most remarkable escape. He was standing near the crane on top of
the viaduct when the deck gave way beneath him. He grabbed the
nearest thing to him, which was a water pipe running along the top
of the viaduct, and found himself suspended in mid-air. The pipe
then broke, dropping him on to the rubble over 30 feet below, from
where he was removed and placed alongside the unfortunate crane
driver under the adjacent arch, which then fell on them both. But,
unlike Mr Smith, he survived to work another day - no doubt to the
astonishment of many of his acquaintances as he re-told the story
of his narrow escape from death.
The cause of the collapse was never definitively identified but
it was likely a combination of the weather, ground conditions,
taking out the timber supports too early, the weight of the crane
and the type of mortar used. Needless to say, the viaduct has
survived perfectly well since its completion in the summer of 1904.
The first trains to cross the viaduct were freight operations,
allowed under a special dispensation after the opening of the line
to Broadway on 1st August 1904 and prior to HMRI inspection. The
trains were arranged to handle the fruit season traffic of the
early autumn, and were required to run at reduced speed, probably
because of settlement of the new embankments. The line opened to
passenger traffic between Broadway and Toddington on 1st December
that year.
Since then, the viaduct has carried countless passenger and
freight trains, from the humble railcars and auto trains serving
local stations to the heaviest Castle-hauled expresses, such as The
Cornishman between Wolverhampton and Penzance. It also supported
the endless heavy mineral trains hauled by GWR 2-8-0s and BR 9F
2-10-0s until the end of steam in 1965. After that, traffic
diminished until the last train movement over the viaduct was a
signal & telegraph engineering train which had collected
equipment from Toddington on 14th August 1977. The viaduct has
since stood silent, supporting nothing weightier than the ballast
left after the track was lifted in 1979, and the occasional
walker.
But after 26 years of slumber, the 15 arches have borne the
weight of a train once again. On Saturday 12th November, just one
day short of 102 years since that disastrous collapse, a locomotive
(electro-diesel no. 73129), hauling the GWR's permanent way train,
gently rolled over the viaduct along track that had just been laid.
This time, however, the viaduct carries a single line down the
centre of the structure, instead of the original double track.
This achievement stands as a remarkable testament to the
voluntary effort, which for the past quarter of a century, has
steadily brought this once-important main line back to life, firmly
putting a beautiful local landmark once again on the railway
map.