Philadelphia-Allegheny County PA Archives News.....Crushed to Death. June 28, 1892 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Linda Blum-Barton lab56@bellsouth.net April 1, 2006, 10:16 pm The Weekly Constitution, Atlanta, GA. June 28, 1892 Eleven Lives Lost by an Accident on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Harrisburg, Pa., June 25. -- The western express on the Pennsylvania railroad, leaving New York at 6:30 o'clock p.m. and Philadelphia at 9:20 o'clock, is due in Harrisburg at 12:15 o'clock a.m. This morning, however, it was several minutes late leaving Philadelphia and had not made up lost time when it reached here. It was made up of one baggage car, one express car, three day coaches and the private car of George Westinghouse, the Pittsburg inventor of the airbrake. Robert Pitcairn, of Pittsburg, was also with the Westinghouse party. As the train rolled into Harrisburg it was stopped a few minutes at Dock street east of the station to allow some shifting in the yeards, a flagman being sent back to signal the second section, which was following close behind. He was soon called in and the train had but started when the second section dashed around a sharp curve a few yards away. Then came horrible grinding and crushing sounds and immediately after the groans and shrieks of injured and dying passengers. It was an awful moment and the wonder is that so many escaped from the terrible wreck. It was but a few minutes until the industrial establishments in South Harrisburg supplied an army of willing men who did all in their power to rescue the imprisoned men, women and children and alleviate their sufferings. The firemen and police force, under Mayor Fritchey's direction, also did excellent service and assisted in getting the injured to the city hospital as soon as possible. Physicians and surgeons were also summoned and labored throughout the night to relieve the pain of the bruised and lacerated passengers. List of the Killed. The total number of dead thus far is eleven, as follows: Robert S. Raymond, Columbus, O., horse dealer E. M. Whitlock, 133 Arlington street, Cleveland, O., chief clerk of railroad company. Daniel Mason, Hagerstown, Md., telegraph operator on the middle division of the Pennsylvania railroad. Rev. D. E. Costa Pomeren, 3611 Hamilton street, Philadelphia Mrs. Uriah Hebner, Norristown Winfield Hebner, her son, aged seventeen years Professor G. L. Smith, of Baltimore Charles E. L. Fee, of 1 Windsor street, Allegheny City, supposed to be a telegraph operator Richard Adams, Harrisburg, a furniture dealer This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/pafiles/ File size: 2.9 Kb