Bere Ferrers rail accident

24 September 1917

Remembrance plaque at Bere Ferrers
Remembrance plaque at Bere Ferrers (Waymarking)

Ten New Zealand soldiers were killed when they were hit by a train at Bere Ferrers in southern England.

The accident occurred as troops from the 28th Reinforcements for the NZ Expeditionary Force were being transported from the port of Plymouth to Sling Camp on Salisbury Plain. These men had just arrived in Britain on the troopships Ulimaroa and Norman, and were heading to the NZEF base to complete their training.

The train carrying the New Zealanders had left Plymouth Friary Station at 3 p.m. Prior to departure the men on board were informed that rations would be served at the train’s first stop in Exeter. Orders were given for two men from each carriage to collect provisions from the guard’s van when the train stopped.

At 3.52 p.m. the train made an unscheduled stop at Bere Ferrers in response to a signal. As the rear carriages stopped outside the station those on board assumed they had reached Exeter. Eager to find food and ignoring the ‘two from each carriage’ instruction, many of the men jumped off, some onto the opposite track. Moments later they were struck by an oncoming train.

The London to Plymouth express had left Exeter at 2.12 p.m. and was approaching Bere Ferrers as the troop train came to a halt. Spotting the stationary train on the other track, the driver sounded a long whistle blast before rounding the final bend into the station at 40 miles (64 km) per hour. As the engine of the express passed the rear of the troop train the crew suddenly spotted soldiers on the track. The driver immediately applied the brakes, but it was too late. Nine New Zealanders were killed instantly and another died in hospital. One of the survivors later remarked:

We never thought of express travelling at 40 miles per hour. They don’t travel at that rate in New Zealand. It was a wonder more of us were not killed. I saw the coat-tails of the man in front of me fly up, and I picked his body up afterwards some yards down the line.

The dead soldiers – William Gillanders, William Greaves, John Jackson, Joseph Judge, Chudleigh Kirton, Baron McBryde, Richard McKenna, William Trussell, John Warden and Sidney West – were buried at Efford Cemetery in Plymouth. An inquest held shortly after the accident concluded that the men had left the train on the wrong side because they assumed that the door through which they had boarded the train was also the exit. A verdict of accidental death was recorded.

A year after the tragedy a memorial to the victims was unveiled at St Andrew’s Church in Bere Ferrers. A plaque bearing the names of the dead men was also erected at the railway station. In 2001 New Zealand’s National Army Museum helped arrange a remembrance service in Bere Ferrers, during which a new memorial was unveiled in the centre of the village.

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Find out more about the soldiers killed at Bere Ferrers on the Auckland War Memorial Museum Cenotaph Database

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John Gower

Posted: 20 Feb 2020

There is now a memorial on the platform itself, opened in 2017 by the NZ High Commissioner which is kept in good order with the NZ flag flying. I have some photographs taken in 2020 of anyone wishes to get in touch via this site.