Houten train accident

52°00′28″N 5°11′9″E / 52.00778°N 5.18583°E / 52.00778; 5.18583CountryNetherlandsOperatorMaatschappij tot Exploitatie van StaatsspoorwegenIncident typeDerailmentCauseDue to heat the rails was expandedStatisticsTrains1Injured11

A railway accident between Houten and Schalkwijk occurred in the Netherlands on 7 June 1917 around 4:11 pm Amsterdam time. The locomotive and the first eight coaches were detached from the rest of the train and came to a standstill. Eleven coaches derailed, including one that rolled off the embankment, causing enormous damage.[1] 11 people were injured. Queen Wilhelmina, who was in the train, was unharmed in the accident.

The cause of the derailment was heat: the outside temperature was about 30 degrees Celsius causing expansion of the rails. It was named a "slap in the track". During the evening and night, soldiers who were stationed in the area helped to release one of the two tracks.

The train included two royal coaches. These coaches were at the rear of the train and only the first one derailed. The Queen had made a two-day visit to the Zaltbommel region and was on her way home to The Hague via Utrecht.[2] She helped with taking care of the injured people, being described as calm, and responding professionally. After 20 minutes to half an hour there was no more help needed and the Queen went on by train to Utrecht. At various royal palaces across the country, registers opened on the day after the accident that subjects could use to sign a congratulations to the Queen for the good outcome.

Gallery

References

  1. ^ "De spoorramp van Houten".
  2. ^ "Ontsporing koninklijke trein - Oudhouten" (in Dutch). oudhouten.nl.

External links

  • Video on YouTube
  • v
  • t
  • e
Railway accidents in the 1910s
Location and date
1910
1911
  • Hopkinstown, Wales (23 January)
  • Indianola, Nebraska, US (29 May)
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1900s 1920s
  • v
  • t
  • e
Location
and date