Thomas Hart Benton's painting The Wreck of the Ol' 97. |
There
seems to be something about a train
wreck that inspires a song. Just
about everybody knows Casey Jones. Just two years after the disaster that
inspired that tune, the Southern
Railroad express known as the Fast Mail came barreling down a steep grade at a high rate of speed and
overshot a tight radius turn right
before a trestle sending the engine and train to a spectacular fiery crash at the bottom of a steep ravine.
Within
24 hours a witness/rescuer at the
scene had penned a ballad set to the
melody of a popular fiddle tune, The Ship That Never Returned, the same
tune used latter for Charley on the MTA. Just who that person was later became
a matter of great controversy and an epic lawsuit.
The
Fast Mail, designated as No.
97, ran on contract with the Post
Office for service from Washington,
DC to New Orleans via Atlanta. That made it one of the highest volume
mail trains in the South. To encourage on time performance the contract included penalties for each minute the train arrived behind schedule at
several stops along the route, including Spencer,
North Carolina. Railroad official
regularly pressured train crews to make up lost time to avoid the penalties. As a result engineers often operated trains well above designated speeds.
The
need for speed had contributed to a fatal accident in April of 1903 when the engine
smashed into a boulder on the tracks near Lexington, North Carolina derailing
the train and killing the engineer and Fireman.
On
September 27 that same year a brand new Baldwin
ten wheel 6-5-0 engine, #1102 which
had been delivered just a week earlier was hooked up to No. 97. For some reason, the
train was already running behind schedule when it left Washington. It rolled into Monroe, Virginia, a division
point where train crews were changed, a full hour late. The new engineer, 33 year old Joseph A. Broady, known to his friends and
crew as Steve Broady, was handed
orders to make up the time before the next Post Office penalty point at Spencer. He was told to skip on regular junction stop entirely. Although not explicitly order to exceed the
average 35 miles per hour limit
between Monroe and Spencer, his bosses knew that he would have to exceed that.
Besides
Broady the crew included Fireman A.C.
Clapp, and apprentice Fireman John Hodge, Conductor John Blair, and Flagman
James Robert Moody. Also on board
were Express Messenger W. R. Pinckney and
11 mail clerks. Safe Locker Wentworth Armistead boarded
the train at Lynchburg, Virginia making
a total of 18 men on board.
The
Mail Clerks, express messenger and Armistead were all in the Post Office car
attached directly behind the tender and
ahead of the freight cars.
The
scheduled running time for the 166 miles from Monroe to Spencer was four hours,
fifteen minutes, an average speed of approximately 39 mph. To make up the one hour delay, Broady would
have to run at an average 51 mph over track known for its steep grades and
tight curves. Witnesses thought he was
running at least 55 mph on the downgrade headed into the 45-foot high Stillhouse Trestle. Broady applied his brakes but could not
reduce his speed enough to make the sharp curve leading to the bridge.
The
engine sailed off the track smashing to the bottom of the gorge next to the
trestle. Fire quickly spread and burned
out of control completely consuming all of the wooden cars and almost all of
the mail. A crate of live canaries broke
open in the crash and the birds escaped before the fire consumed the car. Many lingered in the area and became an odd
reminder of the crash.
The wreckage. |
Eleven
men died in the crash, including all of the train crew. The two Firemen were burned beyond
recognition and it was impossible to determine which body was whose. Most of the 7 survivors were injured but
survived because they jumped from or were thrown from the wreck. The distraught express messenger went home
and immediately resigned. Some of the surviving
mail clerks did return to service, though none again on the Fast Mail.
Engine
#1102 was salvaged, repaired, and put back in service. It ran for 32 more years before the Southern
scraped it in 1935.
The
railroad, of course, placed all of the blame on the engineer, and even issued a
report exaggerating his speed. They
never acknowledged any culpability for issuing the orders that made speeding
inevitable.
The
Fast Mail continued to run until 1907
when service was canceled in a re-alignment of mail contracts.
Among
the many local residents who flocked to the scene of the accident to assist in
rescue efforts was Fred Jackson Lewey who
worked at a cotton mill near the
base of the trestle and who was the cousin
of Fireman Clapp. He said he sat
down and wrote lyrics the day after the wreck.
His friend Charles Noell contributed
to the words and suggested the tune. The
Wreck of the Old 97 was widely played in the area and became a standard
at barn dances across the South in the next 20 years.
The
first recording was made for Victor by
the nearly blind primitive fiddle player
G.B. Grayson and his partner Henry
Whitter who played guitar, harmonica, and sang. Whitter also altered the lyrics.
Vernon Dalhart recording. |
Not
long after that in 1924 Vernon Dalhart
that sold more than seven million copies and became the bestselling non-holiday recording
of the first 70 years of the industry.
It is the record that is usually cited for the birth of successful commercial country music.
Success
like that often brings people out of the woodwork claiming a piece of the
pie. In 1927 a former brakeman, railroad telegrapher, and week-end musician claimed that he was
on the scene for the rescue efforts and penned the original lyrics
himself. He sued Victor and won a judgment for past royalties from Victor $65,295.
The company appealed three times, losing each time until the case got to
the Supreme Court, which overturned
the judgment.
Today
experts are divided between the conflicting claims but most side with Lewey and
Noell.
The
song has become a staple of country music, bluegrass,
and the folk revival. It has been covered scores, maybe
hundreds of time by artists as diverse as
Jimmie Rodgers, Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Flatt and Scruggs, Charlie Louvin, The Seekers,
Carolyn Hester, Hank Snow, Box Car Willie, Johnny
Cash, Patrick Sky, and Nine Pound Hammer.
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