OFF THE STRAIGHT AND NARROW
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WOODLESFORD - On Wednesday July 20th, 1910, a train was being shunted into the station goods yard with the rear carriage overshooting the buffers and plummeting down the embankment into Aberford Road. The accident happened shortly after seven o’clock in the morning when there were few people about. Luckily there was nobody on the road at the time and there were no injuries. The coach was badly damaged but successfully recovered by a breakdown crane from Holbeck depot during the course of the morning with the road finally cleared about noon.
The train was for miners who were working at the newly opened Water Haigh colliery and possibly the existing pits of T. & R. W. Bower over the River Aire near Swillington and it left Leeds Wellington Station at 0530, called at Hunslet at 0536 and arrived at Woodlesford at 0543. After its arrival the locomotive was detached from the carriages to “run round” them via the goods yard because of the way the points were arranged. It was then coupled to the back of the train and drew the carriages into a long siding next to the line from Leeds between the platform and Pottery Lane bridge. After just over an hour, when the crew would no doubt have their breakfast, they would push the carriages back across the two main lines and into the goods yard siding ready to set off back to Leeds at 0730. It must have been during this manoeuvre, and possibly with an inexperienced driver or guard, that the train failed to stop in time resulting in the rear carriage crashing through the buffers and plunging into Aberford Road.