Big Jumby 74
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Report on the Collapse of Penmanshiel Tunnel that occurred on 17th March 1979 in the Scottish Region British Railways :: The Railways Archive
Archive of UK railways documents
At the time of the accident, work was in hand to increase the effective headroom by lowering the floor of the tunnel. The work on the Up (southbound) track had been completed and it had been reopened for single line traffic while a party of contractors' employees were engaged in tidying up the newly-excavated floor preparatory to the relaying of the Down line when the roof of the tunnel collapsed over a length of some 20 metres, allowing a quantity of broken rock, estimated at over 2000 tonnes, to pour into the tunnel, blocking it completely.
Of the men at work in the tunnel, 13 made good their escape but 2 were overwhelmed by the fall of rock and lost their lives, despite urgent and determined efforts at their rescue and recovery, including the attendance of a Mines Rescue team. Fortunately, no train was in or closely approaching the tunnel at the time of the collapse.
Apologies if this has been touched on sometime previously (there are a few older posts), but wondering if the resulting diversions of ECML trains, eg via Hexham/Carlisle etc, were planned so that the part of the journeys South of Newcastle remained in their booked pathways, or was it a case of retimings to the South, with both diversions and retimings to the North of the closed section?
Thanks if anyone can recall.
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