82-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 1,1989 Maryland Railroad Tragedy Remembered Editor’s Note: The June 24, 1905 edition of “The Democratic Advocate” reported one of the worst railroad accidents-in Maryland history. In describing the magnitude of the calamity, the paper declared, “Not since 1863, when parts of the Federal and Confederate Armies passed through here and a cavalry fight occurred in the streets has there been such inter est and excitement in Westminster.” The following is a fictional account of that day, which makes use of factual details taken from actual newspaper articles. Photo graphs of the wreck, are courtesy of the Historical Society of Car roll County. THE RANSOM WRECK By Sharon B. Schuster Maryland Correspondent PATAPSCO. Md. ’Long about 190 S, June 17 to be exact, one of the worst train wrecks in Maryland history occurred at Ran som near Patapsco. It was a sweltering hot day. The mercury on the thermometer topped 100 degrees by that Satur day afternoon. Looking for an escape from the fumace-like city, heat-wilted Baltimoreans boarded the special #5 train that would rush them to the cool blue moun tains of Western Maryland. George B. Covell was at the throttle that evening. Among those who could truly judge, he was known as a ‘Master Knight of the Latch.’ he slipped the eighteen sided silver railroad watch from his pocket and saw that they were pushing the 5:00 p.m. scheduled departure. The conductor, George Buck ingham, made his last sweep along the side of the train before he called out the last “’Board! All aboard!” He shook his head and reached for his watch fob as he motioned to a young miss who seemed oblivious to the timetable that others lived by. He felt sure that the face of the smalt intricate watch pinned to her crisp white blouse had rarely seen the light of day. Seeing the hands of his own watch slipping past 5:00, he grabbed the gleaming brass rail of the #5 and pulled himself up onto the steps of the train. The great smoke stack of the engine belched puffs of thick black smoke as the fireman filled her belly with coal. As the train slowly pulled out of Hillen Sta- The wreck |vas a hepp of twisted metal 20 to 30 feet hi tion, Coveil knew he had to give her full throttle to get her back on schedule. Meanwhile, a clean-up crew was boarding a special double header freight that had been dis patched to pick up a spill at Mount Hope. They were headed home, down the mountain toward Patapsco, to spend the Sabbath with their families. Fpurteen year old E.M. Miller was among the crew, along with his father and three dozen other men. Young Miller loved to work with the floater crew. Most of the men were workers at the Catoctin Furnace, and they worked the rail road when they were needed. They were rugged men, and the comraderie that they felt was bound by the times they had seen while working the rails. On this day, they were hot and sweaty, and dirty and tired. Some climbed wearily into the baggage car for the journey home, and others, the boy among them, per ched themselves on top of the train and on the platforms outside. As the freight train’s two engines gained speed down the mountain, Miller felt the cool mountain air rush over his hot skin. Perched on the bumper of the baggage car, his eyes scanned the ‘jungle’, as they often referred to the underbrush along the tracks. He wondered if they would see any ‘smoke bounds’ on the tracks. He had heard his father talk of the way ward men who would mix water and canner heat and shake it up and drink it. “That really put them up in the clouds,” he would say. The ‘deadheads’, as the crew was called, were always full of stories. And this was one of those times that a good tale would make the ride home seem a little shorter. There was talk of good engineers, and the worst they had ever seen, and it all lead up to stories of peo ple killed on the tracks. Each man’s story topped the last There was talk of suicide attempts and track walkers. Some recounted their first encounters with death on the tracks, while others told of the worst time or the strangest. Wide-eyed, young Mill er sat entranced by the details. “Yessir, we ground him up like mincemeat,” ended one story. Another account of death on the rails went like this: “We broke both his arms and legs, and drove one of his ribs right through his heart He looked just like a bundle of rags.” Then there was the story Although passengers on killed, 10 severely injured of the priest who was walking along the tracks with his baqk to the train..“ The engineer didn’t see him, and later he thought he hit a dog or something. One of the crew said when the train hit that priest, he flew up in the air like a ball. about two or three hundred feet. Some say he went straight to heaven.” The stories had taken them to the Gorsuch Road switch where, the freight train was to pull over and wait for three west-bound pas senger trains to go by. The train slowed to an eventual halt and the crew jumped down and rested on a pile of railroad ties on the siding. By this time, the #5 Through Passenger train was speeding tow ard the mountains with 80 passen- gers already feeling cooler than run in two sections that day. of the freight, and some say he when they stepped onto the train Whatever the reason, the crew saw the freight rounding the bend back at Hillen Station. was accounted for the three trains that at Ransom. No one will ever be a true ‘throttle artist’ They said Hfe they had been waiting for and they ‘ sure. George B. Coveil went'to his could move a train with less coal hopped back on the freight to con- death with his hand at the brake, and less water 1 thari '4hybhe ( and tinue their journey doWti 1 tHtf'"' He fcouldhave jumped to save his hardly lift the coal off the stack, mountain. As the train got back on life, but he put the lives of his pas- He checked his watch again and the main track, a flagman waved sengers above his own. He threw seemed pleased with the train’s to one of the crew and pointed to on the brake, blew the whistle and progress, but he had to maintain his watch, but the crewman threw her into reverse. But, the better than 30 mites per hour to motioned him to get on board. freight rounded the bend and the discharge his passengers by the Thinking that the crewman two trains with a crash scheduled 6:03 p.m. knew the schedule better than he, that was heard for a mile apd a The crew of the now resting the flagman dismissed his con- half away, freight passed the time with more ccms and hopped on the train. Young Miller jiitnped from the talk of trains. They watched as the The fireman of the freight fed bumper just in the nick of time. Blue Mountain Express streaked coa l into the firebox like a fevered The passengers on the #S escaped by. They talked about how pretty man - H® shoveled so hard and so serious injury, but 26 of the floater she was, with each spoke of the fast 1,131 his teeth dropped onto the crew were killed, ten severely driving wheels painted yellow, shovel and he threw them into the injured and two slightly injured, and the rods polished and buffed f umac ® before he knew what hap- They said there was a postal clerk to catch the sunlight. It ran in two P® ned< ® ut he kept on shoveling, on board the passenger train sections that day. At the end of the Soon the boy, young Miller, heard whose legs were broken. He had hour’s wait, the Union Bridge the engines popping and cracking in his possession a mail bag and Accommodation passed them. through the wooded bottoms, refused to surrender it until an Maybe they thought the third They would soon be coming up on official representative of the Post train was the #5. Maybe they PaIa P SCO - Office arrived. Some say there didn’t realize that the Express had “Patapsico.” That’s the way the was a great amount of money on people who lived there said it. the train that disappeared. Miller thought of the times when The wreck was a heap of' he rode the train to school and the twisted metal twenty or thirty feet conductor would announce high. The next day, the Sabbath, Patapsco as “Paradise, Paradise! crews were still digging through Next stop Paradise!” Anyone who the wreckage. Young Miller, dry knew anything about Patapsco eyed and fearless, helped to iden knew it wasn’t exactly Paradise, tify the dead, among which was One good thing about it was that it his father. The engineers of both meant they would be closer to trains were killed. Covell’s body home. was crushed like jelly, but his The ‘quailing’ of the whistle eighteen sided silver watch was jolted Miller back from his day- still running, dreaming. The train was speeding ■ Victims of the Ransom Wreck down the track at over thirty miles were fitted with the finest coffins, per hour. It was 5:57, They were and each was adorned with a making good time. basket of flowers. George B. Some say he heard the whistle Coveil was buried on his birthday. "Oil,. >, V history occurred at Ransom near Patapsco. wmesiead wies