The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Tragic day 10 people perished in crash

Angus: Seventy years ago today, Forfar day trippers died in accident

- GRAEME STRACHAN gstrachan@thecourier.co.uk

It was a rail tragedy that cast a dark cloud over Angus.

Exactly 70 years ago today a bus carrying day trippers careered out of control on to a level crossing near Kirriemuir, where it was struck by a passing train.

Ten people from Forfar died at Balmuckety crossing and the anniversar­y of the tragedy has been marked by an Angus historian.

David Orr, whose house overlooks the site of the crash, said many local people were affected by the accident and remember it still.

He said: “With the war hardly over, and many servicemen not yet demobbed, it was particular­ly poignant that tragedy should have struck the civilians of Kirriemuir and Forfar so abruptly on Thursday July 25 1946.

“A bus belonging to a Forfar motor hirer had been on a tour up Glen Clova.

“On board were passengers, all from Forfar – husbands and wives, sisters, parents and children.

“As it approached the manned, signalled and gated level crossing at Balmuckety, it inexplicab­ly failed to stop, crashing through the gates and coming to rest in the middle of the crossing.

“Tragically, that happened just as the 5.08pm train to Kirriemuir was steaming towards the station.

“It was travelling bunker first, and the bunker smashed in to the back of the bus, despite the valiant efforts of the experience­d driver to apply the brakes and put the train into reverse.”

Mr Orr, whose father moved to the farm which bounds the railway line in 1944, wrote about the tragedy in his book the Denmill Diary.

Seven people were killed instantly in the collision and 17 others were injured.

Three of them died later in hospital, taking the death toll to 10.

He said: “All available doctors and ambulances were summoned, as fast as was possible at the time, to the scene from Forfar and Kirrie, even Dundee.

“The local police found dead and injured strewn along both sides of the railway track, and did whatever they could to relieve their suffering.”

The dead included a married couple and two spinster sisters, and the injured included children, two seven-year-olds and one 10-year-old.

A young couple who were injured had been married only three weeks before. They were on the outing with the bride’s parents, who were the couple who died.

A Ministry of Transport official inquiry turned up serious faults on the coach and found its maintenanc­e had been neglected.

It said the tragic accident could have been prevented had the vehicle been in a better mechanical condition.

 ?? Picture: Paul Reid. ?? David Orr with his book Denmill Diary, with the crash site in the distance. Below: rescuers at the scene of the tragedy 70 years ago.
Picture: Paul Reid. David Orr with his book Denmill Diary, with the crash site in the distance. Below: rescuers at the scene of the tragedy 70 years ago.
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