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Post by 21146 on Dec 2, 2008 16:24:24 GMT
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Post by tubeprune on Dec 2, 2008 21:36:24 GMT
One of the pictures quite clearly shows Charlie Cope, Chief Operating Manager, in the background. Anyone remember him? I remember Moorgate very well. I did some technical work for the enquiry.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 2, 2008 22:08:45 GMT
I do indeed remember "Charlie". Always popped up somewhere you never expected him to - never lost for something to say, especially if he found an extended interval in your service (as a Traffic Controller) and that's despite loads of cancellations because of no guards in those days!
However, the only time I found him lost for words was when, as Head Controller, I rang him up early one Sunday morning (it wasn't a social call - it was my job!!) to tell him of the Bakerloo train that had run away from Queen's Park, which finished up south of Regent's Park.
I think there are details of this incident on another thread somewhere.
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Post by superteacher on Dec 2, 2008 23:26:16 GMT
I still can't believe there is no plaque / memorial at Moorgate.
Those picrtures encapsulate the disaster from so many perspectives. I was too young to remember it, but it has always sent a shiver up my spine.
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Post by 21146 on Dec 2, 2008 23:57:10 GMT
It was a shock to me still at school, but hoping for employment by LT (bus or rail), which I'd never had got under an alleged "competence-based" interview.
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Post by JR 15secs on Dec 4, 2008 14:53:07 GMT
I remember the crash well as I was early spare at Camden, there was also an crash at High Barnet in the shunting neck that day. I remember Charlie Cope when I was a controller always floating around.
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Tom
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Post by Tom on Dec 5, 2008 23:09:30 GMT
I remember the crash well as I was early spare at Camden, there was also an crash at High Barnet in the shunting neck that day. I've heard that from only one other person previously - the AET at High Barnet when it happened. It was never recorded in the 'Collisions with buffers and other fixed objects' list in Rails Through The Clay - no doubt because Moorgate overshadowed it?
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 6, 2008 9:47:55 GMT
I remember that terrible day, I was off duty at home when they annouced it on the radio, such a terrible accident. When we were back on duty we were told at London Bridge no trains northbound were to stop there.
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Post by ruislip on Dec 6, 2008 16:54:02 GMT
Coming home from school that day, my mum told me that there was a bad accident at Moorgate. My first thought that it was a Met. But when I got home and turned the telly on, found out that it was a Northern City train.
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Post by ribaric on Dec 6, 2008 17:34:28 GMT
I was on a battery loco (I've forgotten what we were doing) and were being held outside of Acton Town EB. We had a transistor radio (don't tell the boss!) and heard it over a newsflash. Like so many big incidents, the scale was much bigger than we'd originally envisaged. Didn't a diminutive chief engineer get the OBE for his work there? Someone later referred to it as "Other Buggers' Efforts".
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Tom
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Post by Tom on Dec 6, 2008 21:06:07 GMT
Gordon Hafter got an OBE, I think.
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towerman
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Post by towerman on Dec 6, 2008 22:59:40 GMT
Some of the breakdown gang at Hainault were there,said it wasn't nice esp after 2 to 3 days.Wasn't Gordon Hafter the guy who actually got to the cab,or what was left of it ,to check the state of the controls?
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 7, 2008 11:02:14 GMT
What ever happened to the guard that fateful day
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 7, 2008 11:04:26 GMT
Some of the breakdown gang at Hainault were there,said it wasn't nice esp after 2 to 3 days.Wasn't Gordon Hafter the guy who actually got to the cab,or what was left of it ,to check the state of the controls? Wasnt the controls in near perfect condition, the deadman in the open position, it must have been a horrific job to have to do. It was bad enough on the Northern Line passing through during the cleanup.
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Post by 21146 on Dec 7, 2008 14:24:45 GMT
If I recall correctly the guard left LT shortly afterwards. I seem to remember he was sort of put into the 'fall guy' position. Was he walking through the train collecting papers instead of being on his gangway? Why didn't he pull the train down? Did he open the rear DBVIC for some unexplained reason, thus reducing the effect of the Westinghouse Brake? All these stories circulated at the time. It didn't help that at that time he sported the then fashionable look for young men - long hair, no tie, LT uniform dust jacket worn with 'civie' flared trousers. No doubt there were hundreds of LT guards (and bus conductors) who dressed similarly in the mid-70s but it didn't allow him to appear either professional or a credible witness. The whole Moorgate crash subject is awash with conspiracy theories nowadays and I doubt there will ever be an explanation which satisfies everyone. However I do feel it's long enough in the past to be discussed here as a historical event without being deemed either 'insensitive' or 'bad taste' (as some aspects of 7/7 can be).
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 7, 2008 17:29:18 GMT
If I recall correctly the guard left LT shortly afterwards. I seem to remember he was sort of put into the 'fall guy' position. Was he walking through the train collecting papers instead of being on his gangway? Why didn't he pull the train down? Did he open the rear DBVIC for some unexplained reason, thus reducing the effect of the Westinghouse Brake? All these stories circulated at the time. It didn't help that at that time he sported the then fashionable look for young men - long hair, no tie, LT uniform dust jacket worn with 'civie' flared trousers. No doubt there were hundreds of LT guards (and bus conductors) who dressed similarly in the mid-70s but it didn't allow him to appear either professional or a credible witness. The whole Moorgate crash subject is awash with conspiracy theories nowadays and I doubt there will ever be an explanation which satisfies everyone. However I do feel it's long enough in the past to be discussed here as a historical event without being deemed either 'insensitive' or 'bad taste' (as some aspects of 7/7 can be). I agree, and I was a guard of the 70s, but didnt have long hair, but wore the grey dustcoat, and grey uniform surge, 76 was a hot year. I though cannot understand why the guard didnt use the EB, oh and I wore a tie and sometimes the hat, dare I say cut at the peak like most guys did.
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Post by superteacher on Dec 7, 2008 18:22:38 GMT
The guard was apparently not paying attention on the approach to Moorgate, and was not at his position. Even if he had been, there is still no guarantee that he would have pulled the handle.
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 7, 2008 18:57:30 GMT
The guard was apparently not paying attention on the approach to Moorgate, and was not at his position. Even if he had been, there is still no guarantee that he would have pulled the handle. Yes I heard stories, surely though commonsense would have told him too, surely he must have known he was at the terminus, what did he do after the impact then, surely he acted properly.
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Post by 21146 on Dec 7, 2008 19:13:25 GMT
I think it took a certain amount of "b*alls" for a junior Guard to "pull down" an experienced Motorman in those days, you tended to defer to their judgement. By the time the train was careering over the points and entering the station at speed - the first time anyone would had realised something was wrong - it would surely have been too late to avert disaster.
Having heard of drivers going through stations without stopping and being oblivious to the fact when tired (e.g. finishing nights) I am sure that's what happened here. Sooner of later it was going to occur at a dead-end tunnel terminus, just as if CSDE had not been fitted, eventually someone would have opened the doors on the wrong side at West Ham, people would fall out, and just as a c2c train passed on the Down Road. Eventually the 'worst-case' scenario will happen unless technology is put in to prevent it.
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Post by superteacher on Dec 7, 2008 21:15:37 GMT
I think it took a certain amount of "b*alls" for a junior Guard to "pull down" an experienced Motorman in those days, you tended to defer to their judgement. By the time the train was careering over the points and entering the station at speed - the first time anyone would had realised something was wrong - it would surely have been too late to avert disaster. Having heard of drivers going through stations without stopping and being oblivious to the fact when tired (e.g. finishing nights) I am sure that's what happened here. Sooner of later it was going to occur at a dead-end tunnel terminus, just as if CSDE had not been fitted, eventually someone would have opened the doors on the wrong side at West Ham, people would fall out, and just as a c2c train passed on the Down Road. Eventually the 'worst-case' scenario will happen unless technology is put in to prevent it. Fair comments, alhough how he managed not to be shaken from his daydreaming when crossing the points at 35 mph is not explicable. The problem with the accident is that every theory has reasonable doubt attached to it. I personally believe that it was definitely not suicide though.
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 8, 2008 9:57:33 GMT
I think it took a certain amount of "b*alls" for a junior Guard to "pull down" an experienced Motorman in those days, you tended to defer to their judgement. By the time the train was careering over the points and entering the station at speed - the first time anyone would had realised something was wrong - it would surely have been too late to avert disaster. Having heard of drivers going through stations without stopping and being oblivious to the fact when tired (e.g. finishing nights) I am sure that's what happened here. Sooner of later it was going to occur at a dead-end tunnel terminus, just as if CSDE had not been fitted, eventually someone would have opened the doors on the wrong side at West Ham, people would fall out, and just as a c2c train passed on the Down Road. Eventually the 'worst-case' scenario will happen unless technology is put in to prevent it. Fair comments, alhough how he managed not to be shaken from his daydreaming when crossing the points at 35 mph is not explicable. The problem with the accident is that every theory has reasonable doubt attached to it. I personally believe that it was definitely not suicide though. I agree with these comments, I once nearly opened the doors the wrong side at Golders Green, but thankfully it was adverted, however surely the guard at moorgate had he had been stationed at his position junior to the motorman or not would have reacted as best he could and pulled him down, the truth of it he wasnt he was searching for papers nodoubt. I dont think it was suicide, it takes a brave person to do that, just think you can see the headwall coming and you do nothing. Perhaps it was tiredness, we will never know, but like you say the clatter of the points would wake anyone up. Why didnt any of the passengers pull the handel as well, so many what ifs and whys.
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Post by Deleted on Dec 8, 2008 10:24:16 GMT
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Post by Deleted on Dec 8, 2008 12:38:50 GMT
I do indeed remember "Charlie". The name still gets mentioned even now.....even though I started quite recently (2006) I have heard people talk about him.....did he have a brother on the combine as well? I'm certain I've heard someone use 'The Cope Brothers' before.........
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Post by 21146 on Dec 8, 2008 16:19:42 GMT
One little known fact that Drayton Park was a 'Met' depot and not a Northern Line one. This was a consequence of the GN&CR being taken over the Met Rly between the wars. Indeed when I first received a Guard's Nomination Form in 1978 it was still listed in "Met Line East" - together with Barking and New Cross, albeit scored through. M/M Newson was awaiting transfer back to Barking at the time of the crash.
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Post by superteacher on Dec 8, 2008 17:31:21 GMT
And of course, there is the inexplicable fact that he didn't raise his hands to cover his face. To me, this is the thing that tells me it wasn't suicide. It's such an instinctive reaction, and even if he had closed his eyes, he would have known what was coming, and still raised his hands.
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Tom
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Post by Tom on Dec 8, 2008 19:18:01 GMT
I think it took a certain amount of "b*alls" for a junior Guard to "pull down" an experienced Motorman in those days, you tended to defer to their judgement. Especially as the guard felt very safe when working with M/M Newson. Why would he even feel the need to pull him down?
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 8, 2008 20:53:41 GMT
I think it took a certain amount of "b*alls" for a junior Guard to "pull down" an experienced Motorman in those days, you tended to defer to their judgement. Especially as the guard felt very safe when working with M/M Newson. Why would he even feel the need to pull him down? Qualified, safe or not, if the guard was at his position, the rattle and speed going over the points would Im sure relate all is not well, wouldnt it have been better to pull the brake downl
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Post by norfolkdave on Dec 8, 2008 21:03:53 GMT
And of course, there is the inexplicable fact that he didn't raise his hands to cover his face. To me, this is the thing that tells me it wasn't suicide. It's such an instinctive reaction, and even if he had closed his eyes, he would have known what was coming, and still raised his hands. Sadly no one will ever know the truth but hell could he have had a brain failure or something along those lines, because he was tranced, not even the points unsettled him according to people who saw him in the cab
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Post by slugabed on Dec 8, 2008 22:17:39 GMT
I remember having a conversation with a bloke who took trainee drivers out on the Northern Line.This would have been in mid-1979 and obviously the Moorgate crash would have been fresh in his mind.We talked about possible explanations as to why it happened,and he told me that once he had been supervising one particular motorman,and had asked him to slow on approach to a station (Tooting Broadway if I remember correctly) and met with no reesponse,he repeated the request with urgency,and looked at the driver who stood there like a statue.The supervisor took the controls and brought the train to a halt,the cab beyond the station in the tunnel,and said to the driver "What the **** was that about" and the driver looked completely shocked and had no recollection af the approach to the station. The supervisor likened it to how some people react to strobe lights,as a form of epilepsy,and suggested that perhaps the Moorgate crash could have been caused by a similar occurrence.
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Post by Tomcakes on Dec 9, 2008 1:08:42 GMT
I think it took a certain amount of "b*alls" for a junior Guard to "pull down" an experienced Motorman in those days, you tended to defer to their judgement. I get the same impression - whereas today (if guards existed) I'm sure there would be all sorts of safeguards and things would be very different (being more 'safety conscious') - things were, inherently, different then. The supervisor likened it to how some people react to strobe lights,as a form of epilepsy,and suggested that perhaps the Moorgate crash could have been caused by a similar occurrence. I recall reading something similar - weren't the tunnel lights on? IMHO, this is the more likely explanation, although it is unlikely that certainty will be reached.
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