1951 Gillingham bus disaster

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The 1951 Gillingham bus disaster occurred on the evening of 4 December 1951, when a double-decker bus belonging to the Chatham & District Traction Company ploughed into a company of fifty-two young members of the Royal Marine Volunteer Cadet Corps, aged between ten and thirteen, in Gillingham, Kent, England,[1] killing twenty-four of them and injuring another eighteen. At the time it was the highest loss of life in any road accident in British history.

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[edit] The accident

The company was marching from Melville Royal Marine Barracks, Gillingham, to the Royal Naval Barracks, Chatham, to attend a boxing tournament. It was divided into three platoons; the rear platoon consisted of new recruits who had not yet received uniforms. They were generally under the command of cadet non-commissioned officers (NCOs); the only adult present was the contingent adjutant, Lieutenant Clarence Murrayfield Carter, a regular Royal Marines officer. The column was about fifteen yards long and was marching three abreast on the left-hand side of the road. It was showing no lights, there being no official requirement to do so, and the boys in uniform were wearing Royal Marines standard-issue dark blue battledress and berets, although they had white belts and white lanyards on their shoulders.

The cadets left Melville Barracks at about 5.40pm. At about 5.57 or 5.58pm the column was marching down Dock Road, just past the gates of the Chatham Royal Naval Dockyard. The street lighting was very poor and it was allegedly a very dark night (although Carter denied this). As the column passed the municipal swimming pool, a particularly dark part of the street (since a street lamp had failed), it was hit from behind by a bus allegedly travelling at 15–20 miles per hour (although Carter estimated its speed as 40–45 miles per hour and another witness agreed). The bus driver, John William George Samson, 57, had worked for the company for forty years, twenty-five of them as a driver. He was very familiar with this route. He had his sidelights on, but not his headlights; this was perfectly legal and considered to be normal practice at the time.[2] However, other bus drivers said that they were using headlights that night and in that location as it was particularly dark (on the other hand, others defended Samson's decision not to).

Lieutenant Carter, who was moving up and down the flanks of the column, told the inquest that he saw the bus coming and told the boys to move into the kerb as far as they could, assuming the bus would move around them. Samson told the inquest that he did not see the cadets at all and was only aware he had driven into something when the bus started to wobble as though it "had run over a lot of loose stones or something", although it was also reported that he felt bumps and heard the high-pitched screams of the cadets. At that point he braked immediately. His conductress, Dorothy Dunster, called out "What's happened?", and Samson got out to see what had happened. Carter, who was knocked over and dazed but not injured, said the bus continued about fifty yards before braking and another witness said he thought about twenty-five yards.

[edit] Aftermath

Seventeen boys died immediately and another seven died later in hospital, all but one on the same night. Those who were uninjured were all in the front ranks. The military funeral of twenty of the boys who died was held at Rochester Cathedral on 12 December 1951 and conducted by the Bishop of Rochester. Thousands of local people stood outside the cathedral and lined the route of the funeral procession to Gillingham Cemetery. Royal Marines guarded the coffins and acted as pall bearers and the ceremony was attended by, among others, the Second Sea Lord, the Commandant-General Royal Marines, and the Parliamentary and Financial Secretary of the Admiralty. Three of the boys who were Roman Catholics had a separate funeral at the Church of Our Lady, Gillingham, conducted by the Bishop of Southwark.

An inquest was held on 14 December 1951 at the Royal Naval Hospital, Gillingham, where many of the injured were being treated, before the North-East Kent Coroner. The jury returned a verdict of accidental death. The coroner said that he believed that Lieutenant Carter and the other witness, George Thomas Dixon, were probably mistaken about the speed of the bus and accepted Samson's estimate of his speed. He did not believe that either Carter or Samson had been negligent in legal terms.

Despite the coroner's comments, Samson was charged with dangerous driving. He was found guilty at the Central Criminal Court, but with a recommendation of leniency from the jury. The judge banned him from driving for three years and fined him £20.

The parents of the boys who died received a total of £10,000 compensation from the bus company, which accepted liability under the tort of negligence.

The accident resulted in improved street lighting in the Medway Towns and the decision of all three services that a red light would henceforward be shown at the rear of all columns marching along roads at night.

The mayors of Gillingham, Rochester and Chatham set up a memorial fund, inviting public donations through the local and national press "to be devoted, among other things, to defraying the funeral expenses, caring for the boys who may be disabled, and then to such worthy cause or causes in memory of the boys who lost their lives, as the mayors may determine". Donations of nearly £9,000 were received. Over £2,300 was spent, but the mayors could not decide how to apply the balance of the funds. A court case later decided that the fund was not charitable and was not saved by the Charitable Trusts (Validation) Act 1954; that the cy-près doctrine could not be applied; that the fund's objects were too uncertain for it to be a valid trust; that the fund was not bona vacantia; and as a result that the funds should be returned to the donors under a resulting trust.[3]

[edit] Casualties

The boys who died were:

  • Anthony E. Aindow, 13, died in All Saints' Hospital, Chatham
  • J. Colin Batty, killed outright
  • James David Blomeley, killed outright
  • John H. Burdett, 10, died on 10 December 1951 in St Bartholomew's Hospital, Rochester
  • Brian Alfred Butler, killed outright
  • Arthur John Calvert, killed outright
  • David A. Charles, died in St Bartholomew's Hospital, Rochester
  • Raymond Peter Cross, killed outright
  • James C. Cunningham, killed outright
  • Alan John Evans, killed outright
  • P. H. Eyre, died in St Bartholomew's Hospital, Rochester
  • John E. Lee, 10, died in St Bartholomew's Hospital, Rochester
  • Rodney C. McBride, killed outright
  • Garth Mossop, killed outright
  • Laurence P. Murphy, died in All Saints' Hospital, Chatham
  • Richard C. Ongley, killed outright
  • Albert John Rose, killed outright
  • James Keith Scott, killed outright
  • James Shepherd, killed outright
  • William Stone, killed outright
  • John C. Thorneycroft, 11, died in All Saints' Hospital, Chatham
  • B. Tickner, killed outright
  • James Robin Trigg, killed outright
  • Kenneth Walker, killed outright

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ The borders between the Medway Towns are fairly fluid. Although maps generally show Dock Road as being in Chatham, the newspapers of the time almost always reported the accident as occurring in Gillingham, and this is the name by which it is usually known.
  2. ^ It was not made compulsory to show headlights after dark in Britain until the 1970s - in fact, many experts thought it was dangerous to show headlights where there was any form of street lighting as they could dazzle oncoming drivers.
  3. ^ Re Gillingham Bus Disaster Fund, Bowman v Official Solicitor [1958] Ch 300, [1958] 1 All ER 37, Harman J; upheld by the Court of Appeal, [1959] Ch 62, [1958] 2 All ER 749.

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