Railway Accidents & Incidents in South-East England

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Stock Code
A8119.0
A8119
This unique volume is a startling record of memorable, sometimes tragic, happenings culled from the railway history of three counties in south-east England: Sussex, Surrey and Kent. Among the extraordinary incidents in West Sussex was the damage to Bognor station by gale force winds in 1897, followed just two years later by a disastrous fire caused by a porter drying his coat on a stove. At Cocking, in 1951, a locomotive plunged into a gully, resulting in the end of goods services from Chichester to Midhurst. Bramley and New Malden stations were subjected to direct enemy aircraft fire in WWII. Tales of murders include the unsolved 1905 case of Mary Sophia Money, thrown to her death from a moving train in Merstham Tunnel, Surrey. In Kent, an employee at Dover Priory Station, Thomas Wells, shot dead his intolerable boss, Edward Walsh, on 1 May 1868. He received the death sentence and was the first criminal in the country to be hanged privately behind prison walls.
More Information
Stock Code A8119.0
Author D'Enno D
ISBN13 9781445681191
Format Softback
Height(mm) 234
Width(mm) 165
Page Count 96
Pictures 180
Publication Date 15 Feb 2024
Publisher AMBERLEY PUBLISHING
Publication Status Available
Record last updated 18/04/2024