151 people died in the Tangiwai disaster, of which only 131 were found - the remaining twenty were presumed swept away by the Whangaehu River to the Tasman Sea. The dead consisted of the driver and fireman, 148 second-class passengers, and one first class passenger.
The crash was hard to prevent. In 1953, the central North Island Main Trunk still used tablet signalling with semaphore signals, and there were no track circuits. The driver and firemen had been flagged down by a passing motorist, and evidence found that the train had applied its brakes at least 700 metres before the bridge. The train was 11 carriages long, plus locomotive, so it would have been hard to stop.
Today, warning systems have been installed to prevent this type of disaster occuring. Track circuits can detect broken tracks and stop trains. In addtion, a flood detection device is placed upstream of the bridge, which gives 90 minutes warning of a flood or lahar before it reaches the bridge. The warning is sent to the national train control centre in Wellington where they can stop trains.
After the Tangiwai Rail disaster in 1953, the community came together to support one another through fundraising, emotional provision, and offering practical help. Similarly, after the Mt Ruapehu disaster in 1953 where a lahar occurred, emergency services worked alongside local communities to provide aid and support to those affected.
PEPCON disaster happened in 1988.
Flixborough disaster happened in 1974.
Ibrox disaster happened in 1971.
Luzhniki disaster happened in 1982.
24 December 1953
The Tangiwai Disaster occured at 10:21pm on 24 December 1953, New Zealand time. (9:21am on 24 December 1953 UTC)
tangiwai disaster
unfortunately, 151 people died in the Tangiwai disaster
The disaster occured at the North Island Main Trunk bridge over the Whangaehu River at Tangiwai. Tangiwai is located on the south-eastern side of Mount Ruapehu, around 10km east of Waiouru, and 20km east of Ohakune, in the North island of New Zealand.
The Tangiwai disaster occured in 1953, on 24 December.
The Tangiwai Disaster.
Quite badly.
Why don't you look it up instead of being lazy
Charles John Henry Parker
The Tangiwai disaster was caused by a lahar which flowed down into the Whangaehu river carrying away the Rail bridge. It was around 10pm when the Wellington to Auckland express carrying nine carriages and one engine, travelling around 60 to 70/kph passed right over the broken down railbridge. The tragedy was one of New Zealands worst disasters in history.
24 December 1953