Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 26, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
winnipegfreepress. com
THIS CITY
. OUR WEEKLY LOOK AT THE PULSE OF THE CITY
.
A8 SUNDAY, JULY 26, 2015
I N a few months, it will be the
centenary of Manitoba's seconddeadliest
rail disaster. Nineteen
people were killed in the Brandon
Train Wreck, as it was called,
when two trains collided in the heart
of the city.
The crash happened on the morning
of Jan. 12, 1916. It was a brutally cold
day, with a high temperature of just
- 36 C. In Brandon's Canadian Pacific
Railway yard, ice fog mixed with smoke
from locomotives and industrial facilities
along the tracks to create near- zero
visibility.
That morning, a " snow train" was
working in the yard. It consisted of 10
cars plus a caboose and was manned
by the train's crew, a gang supervisor
and more than 20 temporary labourers
hired by the CPR to shovel snowdrifts
from the tracks. The labourers were
referred to as " Austrians," although
they were from modern- day Ukraine
and Poland.
At around 10 a. m., the snow train began
slowly making its way along a " Y track" to
cross onto the mainline. At the same time,
a livestock train destined for Winnipeg was
departing the yard on the mainline. Both trains
were travelling at a crawl, neither of them exceeding
10 km/ h. At 10: 05 a. m., enveloped in fog
and smoke, the crew of the livestock train felt
a strong jolt. It wasn't enough to knock them
off their feet, but they knew they had struck
something.
When they emerged, they saw the devastation.
Their train had sideswiped the snow train
just as it was merging with the mainline. Their
steel locomotive lifted two flatbed cars off
the tracks and pushed them onto the caboose,
crushing it.
It turned out more than a dozen of the labourers
had crammed into the caboose to escape the
cold. All of them were killed. Others, who had
been walking alongside the train or riding on
the flatbed cars, lay dead or injured nearby.
As the Brandon Daily Sun noted, " news of
the accident spread like wildfire." People with
medical training from around the city went to
the site. Another caboose was brought alongside
to act as transportation for the injured, and the
gas company offered its plant, located just off
the tracks, as a makeshift hospital.
Word soon reached the families of the men,
many of whom lived in " the flats," a shantylike
settlement along the northern edge of the
yards. The Daily Sun reported " Soon there was
a crowd of women from the flats volubly inquiring
as to the fate of their husbands, sons and
brothers."
The extreme cold hampered rescue attempts
and may have caused the death of some of the
injured. Another three men died in the hours
after the crash, as did at least two more over
the next couple of days, bringing the death toll
to 19. Many who survived the crash suffered
serious injuries, with some losing fingers and
feet to frostbite.
The coroner's inquest began the next day in
Brandon's city hall chambers. Because so many
of the witnesses were still in hospital, it was an
abbreviated opening session with just a handful
of people called, including the yard supervisor,
a dispatcher and some of the crew from the
livestock train.
The livestock train's conductor testified
he had been warned there was a snow train
working in the yard and that he proceeded at a
slow speed as a precaution. He did not expect
to come across the snow train so quickly, just a
couple of minutes after pulling out. He said because
of the fog and smoke, they could not see
the other train in time to stop. The crash could
not be avoided.
The inquest resumed two weeks later, on Jan.
25, when more witnesses were available. The
city hall gallery was packed, and many people
had to be turned away.
Members of the snow train's crew were
called. They testified they had received no
notice another train would be pulling out of
the yard that morning. When asked if he had
thought of issuing a warning, the foreman of
the yard replied, " No, not me. The crew of the
snow train should look after their own safety. I
expect every man to look after his own train. I
could not look after all the trains."
It was noted there was no flagman on duty in
the yard that morning to walk trains onto the
mainline. This was not a legal requirement,
but a safety precaution that was available most
days. It was likely too cold to have a man out
there that day and, given the fog, he may not
have been able to prevent the crash. Still, it
was seen as another reason extra precautions
should have been taken.
The jury returned their verdict later that day
after just one hour of deliberation. They exonerated
both crews and put most the blame on
the CPR. Their decision opened with: " We find
that the accident was caused by the negligence
of the Canadian Pacific Railway company in not
safeguarding trains working in the yards and to
which the inclemency of the weather contributed
to a considerable extent."
D. C. Coleman, the assistant general manager
of the CPR, attended the inquest. He called the
jury's findings unjust and tried to pin the blame
on the crews and yard staff. " If the safeguards
provided in the train rules had been observed
by certain individuals, the accident would not
have occurred," he told the Winnipeg Tribune .
Though Brandon's police chief was at the
inquiry so he could take into custody should
anyone found to be at fault, no followup stories
could be found in any of Manitoba's daily newspapers
indicating any punishment was meted
out as a result of the disaster.
Train crashes were commonplace during this
era. That same month, there were two others in
the province that claimed lives. One happened
in St. Boniface just two weeks after the Brandon
disaster. It killed three men on a work train
under very similar circumstances.
There was a sense the Brandon disaster was
different, not just because of the number of
lives lost, but because of who the victims were.
They were poor, immigrant day labourers, not
CPR employees. The families of the dead and
injured were not entitled to the few benefits
that would be available to railway employees
under the same circumstances. As the Manitoba
Free Press noted, " Some of them had very
large families whose sufferings promise to be
very acute if something isn't done for them in
the immediate future."
There are indications that, in the short term
at least, they did get support not only from the
local Galician community, but from the city has
a whole. A group of Brandon's " society ladies"
took it upon themselves to help co- ordinate
incoming donations of clothing, food and other
supplies.
For many who survived the crash, there was
little choice but to go back to work as labourers
for the railway in order to earn enough money
to feed their families and heat their homes.
The Daily Sun wrote of a survivor named Mike
Shadlock who returned to work the next day,
only to collapse in the yard. It turned out he
had suffered severe frostbite to his feet on the
day of the crash, but instead of seeking medical
attention - which likely would have included
amputations - he tried returning to his job
instead.
As many of the men were Catholic, a number
of the funerals were held at St. Augustine
of Canterbury Roman Catholic Church on 4th
Street. From there, the bodies were taken to
Brandon's municipal cemetery where, sadly,
it was left to four fellow Ukrainian labourers
employed by the city to prepare the burial sites.
Little is known about the men who died or
their families. Newspapers of the day rarely
provided the same level of coverage for poor
immigrant deaths as they did for others in society.
None of their photos were published, and
only the sparsest of biographical information
was provided for a handful of the men. One exception
was the Scottish- born supervisor killed
in the caboose, 38- year- old George McGhie,
who left behind a wife and two sons, aged three
and 14.
The men who died were identified in newspaper
accounts and cemetery records, and on
gravestones ( with various spellings and ages),
as Michael Balawyder ( 28), Wasyl Balicki ( 31),
Stephen Batycki ( 37), Juzef Bielawski ( 37), Joe
Dryla ( 16), Stephen Greskow ( 38), Anthony
Jarnowski ( 30), Ignace Kurcharski ( 44), John
Lacarski ( 25), John Lisawski ( 29), Shenik Lowestian
( 29), Andrew Malnozok ( 30), Alex Meskowski
( 51), Harry Moroz ( 40), Mike Robeck
( 50), Tony Rutkowski ( 50), Anthony Rzemyk ( 20)
and Wasyl Sojczik ( 27).
The graves of all of the men, except McGhie,
can be found in the same row of Section 20 in
Brandon's municipal cemetery. Only five of the
graves in Section 20 have headstones; the rest
are unmarked.
The Brandon Train Wreck remained Manitoba's
deadliest rail disaster for more than
three decades, surpassed only by the Dugald
Train Disaster of 1947. Sadly, unlike Dugald,
there is no memorial or marker near the crash
site or at the cemetery to commemorate those
who died in Brandon.
Christian Cassidy writes about local history on
his blog, West End Dumplings.
CHRISTIAN
CASSIDY
THIS WAS MANITOBA
Deadly
day
in Brandon
Rail disaster
claimed lives
of 19 workers
S. J. MCKEE ARCHIVES, BRANDON UNIVERSITY
The Canadian Pacific Railway yards in Brandon, circa 1913. Three years later, the yards were the scene of a deadly crash.
S. J. MCKEE ARCHIVES, BRANDON UNIVERSITY
CHRISTIAN CASSIDY FOR THE WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
The grave
of Ignace
Kurcharski, 44.
He is one of only
six crash victims
whose graves
are marked.
CHRISTIAN CASSIDY FOR THE WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
LEFT: The rail yards today. There is
no memorial or marker honouring
those killed in the 1916 crash.
BELOW: The yards circa 1908.
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