Front cover image for Train wrecks : a pictorial history of accidents on the main line

Train wrecks : a pictorial history of accidents on the main line

In 1853 forty-six people were killed in a head-on collision between two trains of different lines running on the same track at Secaucus, N.J. and the early safety record of railroads came to a sickening halt ... only to suffer another crash three months later involving a Rhode Island excursion train. American railroading was expanding with tentative fingers and having them run over. Here is the absorbing story of wrecks on the right-of-way--wrecks which brought on "horror" articles, songs, and scare-sketches frightening travelers and even making for more accidents. One man, Cornelius Vanderbilt who "hated railroads," after almost dying in a wreck lived to dominate the scene and control the New York Central. The railroads survived but grim echoes followed the first multiple casualties in the early railroad era and alarm bells were set off with dire warnings, which both curtailed and stimulated travel. from cover

Print Book, English, ©1968
Bonanza Books, [Place of publication not identified], ©1968