gedunk wrote:The MKT staged accident was quite a show for it's day. Lots of people were there because of all the advertising about the staged accident.
Yep. From 1890 to about 1910, staged cornfield meets were very popular attractions.
One man, nicknamed "Head-On Joe," staged 73 meets, wrecking 146 retired 4-4-0s.
On several occasions, he added a wooden coach which was doused in flammable liquid, and put a bucket of charcoal in it, so that the coach would catch fire in the collision.
The crowds loved it.
Speaking of MKT, they had a real boiler explosion occur at Cumby, Texas in 1921.
The explosion blew the 2-6-0's smokebox door, boiler, & cab completely away, but the running gear & train remained on the rails, and coasted on for 55 feet past the point of the explosion!
Another explosion occurred on Dec. 19. 1890.
On that day, the New York, New Haven, & Hartford's #69 exploded as it was passing through Wallingford, CT.
The locomotive was chopped in two crosswise, and the traction sandbox shot at least 100 ft in the air, before coming down through the roof of a house ahead & to the right of the locomotive.
Thankfully, no one was hurt in the house, and amazingly, the crew survived the violent explosion.
