Vlissingen train accident
The Vlissingen train accident took place on 2 June 1899 in Vlissingen, Netherlands when a passenger train derailed upon ramming the buffer stop of the Vlissingen station after their brakes failed to operate properly, resulting in the deaths of 3 people with a further 2 injured.
Accident
Passenger train number 87 left the Amsterdam Centraal station at 7.15 pm on 2 June 1899 on a voyage to Vlissingen station, which was the final destination of the journey as the track halted there, indicated by the station's buffer stops. Nearing their destination, the train operator noticed that the brakes didn't respond. Without any means to slow the train down, the operator sounded the train whistle multiple times to warn the people standing on the platform it was headed for. The platform was quickly evacuated as the train sped into the station. At the last second, the train operator and the fireman jumped from the speeding train, injuring themselves, but not before the operator had opened the steam valves so steam could escape the train's boiler, preventing an explosion in the inevitable collision.The locomotive plowed into the buffer stop at the end of the track at 10.57 pm, launching it up the one meter high platform and a further three meters into the air before plowing through the station's dining area and into the platform itself. A goods wagon behind the locomotive was crushed and the mail wagon adjacent to it was ripped in half. The passenger wagons of the train were saved from destruction thanks to a broken link between the wagons, and stayed on the tracks, coming to a halt following the collision and leaving its occupants unharmed.