An
Avoidable Tragedy
|
In the push to meet the wartime demand for manpower, the warnings
of the engineers on Troop Train 2980 went unheeded.
|
By Russell C.
Eustice for World War II Magazine
For 56 years I have been
haunted by the memory of a human leg, torn off at the knee,
sticking out of a soldier’s combat boot. The grisly limb was on
a pile of bloody GI field jackets, trousers, helmet liners and
boots at a French village in Normandy on January 17, 1945.
Near the pile of debris
lay two long rows of bodies-one row for the dead, one for the
injured. The able-bodied scurried about and searched frantically
for blankets and first-aid kits. It was, no doubt, a sight
commonplace on the battlefield, but this was not a scene of
combat. This scene of death and destruction was a train wreck, and
these were the bodies of men who had been on the Continent for
only about six hours.
By late December 1944,
the initial success of Adolf Hitler’s Ardennes offensive spurred
the Americans to ship all available reinforcements to the European
Theater of Operations (ETO). Army units of all descriptions
hastened to complete their training in the United States |

NATIONAL ARCHIVES. Although
it was cold, many of the passengers on Troop Train 2980
dangled their legs outside the doors of their boxcars in
order to get some fresh air and take stock of their new
surroundings. This later led to some horrific injuries in
the crash. |
|
and were
ordered to Europe instead of their original destinations in the
Pacific. The first convoy to proceed directly to France from the
United States cast off from New York on January 1, 1945.
Among the ships carrying
personnel and war material in that first convoy was Henry
Gibbons. She had been built in 1943 as a troop transport, and
New Year’s Day saw her loaded with armor, medical, engineer and
quartermaster units. Sleeping arrangements belowdecks were cramped
and uncomfortable, and meals were served only twice a day. Most
soldiers, having trained together as a unit, stuck with their
group during the voyage. Cards and gambling brought some of the
men together, but the real social catalysts were the 40 nurses who
were also on board. The nurses helped to forge friendships across
unit lines and danced with the men to all the music played by
impromptu bands formed during the voyage.
The largest outfit on
board was the 782nd Tank Battalion. Sporting a reputation as the
best-trained group of tankers in the Army, it was made up of 695
enlisted men and 42 officers. Next in size was my own unit, the
134th Evacuation Hospital, numbering 388: 40 nurses, 35 doctors, a
warrant officer, 305 enlisted men and seven medical administrative
officers-of which I was one. The 1471st Engineer Maintenance
Company and the 565th Quartermaster Railhead Company followed us
in size. Finally there was the 553rd Ambulance Company, consisting
of 80 men and three officers.
By the time Henry
Gibbons came into Le Havre, France, on January 16, there was
an atmosphere of friendly familiarity aboard. However, the
discomfort of a lengthy voyage in stormy seas made the troops
anxious to disembark and get on with their wartime
responsibilities.
My unit was called first.
Once down the gangplank, we were loaded onto waiting trucks. We
understood that being the first to get off and loaded onto trucks
was special treatment due to the presence of the nurses in our
ranks. Nevertheless, it was not an easy trip. We sat on hard
wooden benches in the back of open trucks with only a canvas
covering overhead as we rode through darkened villages in a
freezing wind. We were en route to a newly activated staging camp
named, as they all were, for a popular American cigarette brand.
We arrived at Camp Lucky
Strike at 2 a.m. and were assigned to tents pitched on the frozen
ground. Miserable and complaining, we bedded down as best we
could. Our bedrolls were back with the rest of the troops, but we
opened up the musette bags we carried, which contained extra socks
and underwear, toilet kits, a blanket and half a canvas pup tent.
We officers chivalrously gave our blankets to the nurses and
wrapped ourselves in the thin shelter halves, which did little to
help us through the cold night.
Back in Le Havre, Henry
Gibbons was relieved of the rest of her cargo of men and
materiel. The troops came down the gangplank into a grim and
silent port. Quietly, unit by unit, they trudged from the dock in
biting cold to the railroad station through streets strewn with
rubble of the war-damaged port city.
It was 11 p.m. when
Lieutenant Reed Morse of Company C, 782nd, marched his platoon
away from Henry Gibbons. At the station they were loaded
into “Forty and Eights,” French boxcars built to carry 40 men
or eight horses. The forward 24 cars of the train were wood, with
sliding side doors and single pairs of wheels at either end.
Simple couplings linked the cars, which were fitted with rounded
steel bumpers to absorb the force of stops. As uncomfortable as
these unheated railroad cars were, they were welcome refuge from
the wind and rain. Lieutenant Morse and 20 of his men climbed into
one of the boxcars toward the front of the train. Other units from
Henry Gibbons loaded in turn as they arrived at the
station.
Trained in the repair and
maintenance of heavy rolling stock, Lieutenant David Matteson and
the members of the 1471st were not impressed by the French
boxcars. The 1471st’s Sergeant Lowell Sell vividly remembered
the events of that night: “The 4th Squad of the 2nd Maintenance
Platoon was given an empty car, Number 13. Thinking we had plenty
of room, this seemed lucky, so we spread out over the floor.
Suddenly, the door slid open and two groups from the tank outfit
filled our car. Fortunately, our squad decided to stay in a group.
We moved in tight, sitting with our backs against the front of the
car. Stafford was on my right, while Schonce was in the corner and
on my left. Our 4th Squad and the tankers were jammed in tight. I
remember a major in their group at the left side sliding door.”
Meanwhile, the 553rd Ambulance Company climbed onto the train. The
four officers and 170 men of the 656th Quartermaster Railhead
Company were among the last to arrive. Activated in March 1944,
they were well prepared for their mission to distribute rations to
units operating on the front lines. Sergeant Horace Wesche
recalled, “We boarded the train near midnight in cold rain
turning to snow.” Arriving at the station after most of the
other units, they were allotted the metal cars at the rear of the
train.
After what seemed like a
wait of hours, around 2 a.m. the engine jerked the cars into
motion and Troop Train 2980 began to roll. The men removed their
steel helmets and used their field packs as back cushions. The
cold, the train’s uneven motion and the hard floor guaranteed a
sleepless ride.
They did not know that
their impatience to get underway was matched by that of the
officials who were responsible for the train’s schedule. The
pressure was on. During January 1945, Le Havre had become the
principal debarkation point in the ETO. Within a two-week period,
the capacity of the port was almost doubled. Not far away, Camp
Lucky Strike was designated the largest staging camp in Western
Europe, with room for 66,000 military personnel. The plan was to
move GIs by truck or rail from the port to the camp, where they
were to remain about six weeks to assemble equipment and prepare
for movement to the front.
Hard-driving Maj. Gen.
Frank S. Ross, the ETO’s chief of transportation, demanded that
the troop trains move quickly. Any delay had to be explained in
detail to transportation officials.
Troop Train 2980 was no
exception. To assure continuous operation along the train’s
route, a second engineer and fireman rested behind the coal car in
a passenger car equipped with a small stove and bunks. The
train’s two French crews rotated duty under the direction of a
U.S. Army transportation officer. An English locomotive powered
number 2980, drawing 45 Forty and Eight boxcars -24 wooden cars
with well-worn mechanical brakes and 21 steel cars in better
mechanical shape. In the face of wartime demands, the British
engine had been placed in service without a speedometer or
speed-recorder.
|
An
Avoidable Tragedy
|
After departing Le Havre, the train crawled the 32 miles
east to Motteville. It took five hours to cover the distance. A
rest stop at Motteville allowed the engine crews to rotate duties.
Some soldiers warmed themselves by exercising along the tracks
while cocoa and doughnuts were served to the engine’s crew.
During the pause, one engineer took a moment to protest about what
he considered the engine’s poor brakes, but he was reassured by
his superior that there was nothing to worry about and sent on his
way to St. Vaast. The stop at St. Vaast brought additional queries
from the concerned engineer about brake safety, but he was again
ignored and told to head for St. Valery.
Sergeant
Sell remembered: “The night was long and cold. It seemed like
most of the night the train moved very slowly or was stopped a
lot. I supposed the devastated rail yards we crossed made movement
difficult. It appeared that after daybreak we did move a little
faster and more steadily, perhaps 10-15 miles an hour.”
|
|

RUSSELL C. EUSTICE. The
scene at St. Valery after the tragic train accident of
Troop Train 2980 that cost 89 GIs their lives.
|
|
The train stopped and started, swayed and creaked through the
early morning. Twice it stopped in villages and soldiers climbed
on board, yelling to nearby buddies and smoking. Dawn broke while
they were at one stop. The engine was uncoupled and sent to the
rear of the train. It now took off in another direction, with the
engine leading what had been the rear. The engine was later
returned to its previous position.
Toward
the front of the train, Sergeant Julius Farney asked Lieutenant
Morse, “Lieutenant, how long will we be in this cattle car?”
“Sergeant,” responded the lieutenant, “your guess is as good
as mine. But if you think about it we’ll have to stop somewhere
to get our tanks and equipment, so relax.”
A
few minutes after resuming the trip, the train seemed to pick up
speed. The men of the tank battalion agreed that things were
finally progressing. Troops in the other cars opened the sliding
doors and sat with their legs dangling out. Lieutenant Morse’s
men worked to open their door, but it was stuck tight, so they
settled back to await the end of the ride.
The
six miles of track from St. Vaast sloped unforgivingly to St.
Valery and the English Channel. Although the engineer appreciated
the need to limit his speed, his brakes did not respond
adequately, and the train gradually gained momentum. The cars with
air brakes slowed, but the rest gained speed and neutralized the
engineer’s efforts. The engine and trailing cars soon began to
weave and sway. With brakes on, sparks flew from the wheels and
tracks. The engineer blasted his whistle, but the troops on the
train, joyful to finally be moving, ignored the warning.
In
car 13, Sergeant Sell’s platoon noticed: “After one stop,
perhaps this is when the train relief crew took over, we did
finally move faster, maybe 20-25 mph. We all commented that it
would not be long now. Soon we began to move much faster and we
were pleased.” Sergeant Wesche in the quartermaster company
recalled, “The train moved slowly most of the night, but about
10 a.m. on the 17th it picked up speed.”
The
acceleration, however, soon began to seem excessive. The cars
started to rock and the snowbound countryside flew by. Gaining
speed on the downhill grade, the whole train pitched and rocked,
building momentum every minute. The relief crew in their rest car
realized the rate of speed and motion was dangerous. In
preparation for an impeding crash they wrapped themselves in their
bedrolls and lay against the wall of their car. Horrified at the
sound and sight of the train hurtling toward their town, the
villagers in St. Valery crossed themselves and watched the troops
sitting happily in some of the boxcar doors, legs and feet hanging
out.
As
the train picked up even more speed, Sell realized “the car was
skipping on the tracks. Then there was this jerking and lunging.
Then the sense of being airborne.” There was a squeal of metal
on metal, and sparks were now flying from around the wheels. The
men in Sell’s car could see other men jumping. When Lieutenant
Morse’s car began to pitch and rock, he tried again to open the
sliding door, but it would not budge and he shouted to his
tankers, “You men put on your helmets!” Suddenly, the screech
of metal on metal pierced the car. There was a scramble-and then a
crash.
At
10:35 a.m. the engine blasted into the cul-de-sac at the end of
the line at St. Valery at about 60 miles an hour. It tore through
the metal guardrail and crossed the sidewalk into the brick
station. Shattering the near wall, it hurtled through the empty
waiting room and poked 4 feet of its boiler through the opposite
wall. The coal car fell into the station basement, and the whole
train came to a sudden halt.
The
force of the crash caused wooden boxcars to splinter and pile up
on each other, hurling wheels and couplings about randomly.
Sliding doors slammed shut on soldiers’ legs; cars accordioned
into one another behind the coal car, crushing men and pinning
them in the wreckage. One bumper tore loose and flew into a mass
of injured men at the bottom of one car. The relief crew, still
wrapped in their bedrolls, was thrown 30 feet clear as their car
crashed.
For
Sergeant Sell, the airborne sensation came to an abrupt stop. “I
sat stunned for a moment, not knowing what happened,” he
recalled. “A large chunk of iron had come through the front end
of our car, right between Stafford and me. It was either the
coupling or a buffer from another car in front of us. Stafford and
I had both been hit on our shoulders, but we both said we were OK.
I saw French people running toward the train, most of them with
wine bottles. I could not see down the right-hand side of the
pile, but I could see to the left. We were high up on the top of
six or seven cars. As I climbed down, I saw bodies and much blood.
But I kept on climbing down. I felt helpless!”
At
Camp Lucky Strike, muffled shouts and the thud of running feet
woke me. My shelter half, thin as a sheet, had worked its way from
under me, and I felt the frozen ground chilling every joint. The
sun was beginning to warm the tent. I was alone. As the adjutant,
I knew the colonel would expect me to know what the commotion was
about, so I struggled up, scrambled to my feet and went outside.
As one of the doctors, Captain Edward Boone, rushed by, I asked,
“What’s going on, Ed?”
“There’s
been a train wreck in the town,” he said, “and they’ve
called for a bunch of doctors and nurses to help with the
casualties. Our equipment is still on the ship, so it will be
rough trying to treat them. Someone said they were troops from our
transport. Maybe we weren’t so unlucky to be brought out here on
those trucks after all. See you later. They’re ready to go.”
I
hurried on to the headquarters tent, where Sergeant Nester was
cutting temporary orders for all 35 doctors and 40 nurses. The
authorization was from the Base Section commander, so I signed the
orders and made it official. When the colonel came into the tent,
I tried to learn more about what had happened.
“We
don’t know,” he told me, “but they’ve told us that 45
French boxcars filled with troops from our ship jumped the track
and went through the station. It is the end of the line in a
village called St. Valery-en-Caux. They say it’s not far from
here on the English Channel.”
When
we reached St. Valery, the scene we encountered was one of chaos
and horror. Pinned men crawled from the debris as they gradually
freed themselves. Ten cars were piled as high as the station roof,
while wreckage to the rear formed an even higher pyramid. Some
unfortunate men dangled from splintered cars by their damaged
legs, while others had suffered spontaneous amputations and
crushing injuries. Eight men in a forward car weredead of no
visible injuries.
The
engineer and fireman, though injured, were saved by the bulk and
weight of the engine. The stunned relief crew survived with mild
concussions. Some men were untouched, but were stunned to find
neighbors on either side dead or dying.
The
French villagers did what they could. Monsieur Cherfils, the mayor, and
Monsieur Brouard, the head of the local police, rushed to organize local
assistance. Fortunately, the station had been empty. Even the
stationmaster’s wife was on an errand in the downtown area of St.
Valery. So there were no civilian casualties. Military police were
dispatched from nearby camps, and a cordon of security surrounded the
accident scene.
Uninjured
medics from the units on the train used their aid kits and syringes of
morphine to help the injured. Military doctors and nurses rushed in from
the 134th Evacuation Hospital and went right to work. Captain S.J.
Beale, one of our doctors, later recorded his impressions of what he
found: “News of a wreck. They need help. Stirred to go to help.
Horror! Brain churned with disbelief. Clumsy boxcars piled in a tangle
of wood and wheels three tiers high. A poor GI starting to jump from the
top car-left arm, left leg and head outside-middle of him crushed as
doors closed on him, staring through sightless eyes. A small fire
between ties and a rail of the railroad under a helmet with boiling
water. Nobody else near it. Who to help? Crawling under the wreckage and
over a crushed body dressed in GI twill.
“A
voice, ‘Jim, you’re here to help!’ A guy from the tank battalion
with whom we had played cards on the ship. His legs were pinned in
wreckage-fully alert and mindful of his situation. A useful corpsman had
started an IV. Another voice from behind, ‘We’ll be getting him out
soon.’ ‘So long.’ ‘So long, Jim.’
“Outside,
utter dismay at the helplessness. A journey to the local hospital, to
follow French doctors and some of our senior medical officers observing
injured personnel who survived. I couldn’t do a damn thing to help
anybody!”
Sergeant
Albert Lufburrow of the 1471st Engineers escaped without injury. In his
efforts to give help, he cradled a GI with head injuries. The man looked
away and said, “It’s getting dark. I want to go home.” Then he
died. Eight or 10 men from the 1471st supported the side of a demolished
car while Captain Boone crawled underneath and finished a partial leg
amputation with his penknife. Remembering the contents of my own
bedroll, I searched frantically for it. I wanted blankets, whiskey, a
first-aid kit-anything to relieve the suffering that lay all around me.
Most of the bedrolls had been torn open and ransacked as villagers and
soldiers tried to help the wounded. During the frenzied search, I came
across that dismembered leg still shod in its boot.
Sergeant
Sell remembered Captain Brown getting the 1471st together. I started
hunting for Bob Luginbill of the 565th Quartermaster Railhead Company,
and finally we found each other. Fortunately, his company had been
riding close to the rear of the train, where most of the cars were still
upright. Some had slipped off the tracks but were otherwise all right. I
finally got back in formation with the 1471st.
When
the noise, dust and confusion died down around the railyard, Lieutenant
Morse discovered he was “hanging upside down by one leg and unable to
reach the ground.” He later recalled: “Blood was running down my leg
to my belt, and a long sliver of wood was through my upper leg just
above the knee. I reached up and pulled it out. During the hour I was
hanging, I talked with one of my brother officers who was pinned but
otherwise uninjured, and one of my 17-year-old soldiers whose chest was
crushed and who kept asking me to help him. I reassured him as much as I
could, but he died in the hospital two days later. I hung there for over
an hour, feeling no pain and in such intense shock that one of our
medics I met some years later told me he thought I had died.
“It
was a scene of complete horror, a total shambles. There was just about
every conceivable injury among the men who died and the injured: heads
snapped off, single and double amputees, much crushing of heads and
bodies.”
Nurses
from the 134th followed the injured to a local hospital. Despite
language difficulties, they worked alongside the French staff to aid and
comfort the injured.
Brief
news articles about the disaster appeared in the Herald Tribune’s
European edition, The New York Times, the Chicago Sun Times,
the Chicago Tribune and the French Normandie on January 18
and 19. The French newspaper’s description of the accident incorrectly
indicated that an American engineer had been at the controls and that
the brakes locked the wheels of train. In fact, it had been the 580 tons
of men and equipment that overrode all efforts to slow or stop the
train.
French
rail authorities held an immediate investigation and delivered their
findings on February 21, 1945. They concluded that the brakes were
inadequate and that the absence of a speedometer had hindered the
engineer. The investigators also determined that the crew operating the
engine was relatively inexperienced on the St. Vaast-to-St. Valery grade
and that there was no cause for further inquiry. In his summary report
to French rail headquarters and the U.S. Army years later, Lucien
Maffiers, representative to the French Railway System, stated: “A lack
of judgment and evaluation of speed would never have existed on a
locomotive provided with a speedometer; it was a convoy unfit for
transporting men, but we were at war.”
Eighty-nine
soldiers had been killed, and 152 were injured. The 85-man ambulance
company in the first four cars lost 33 dead and 28 injured. Despite
their losses, all the units were filled with replacements and sent into
action. It took the 782nd Tank Battalion until April 23, just weeks
before the German surrender, to move to the front. The 553rd Ambulance
Company was outfitted with 10 ambulances and put to work within one week
of the disaster. The 1471st Engineers and the 565th Quartermaster
Company were operational by mid-March. Although the French had conducted
an inquiry after the accident, the U.S. Army did little to investigate
the tragedy. The Transportation Corps’ meeting minutes of that time
only mention the wreck at St. Valery twice in passing.
Minutes
of the Transportation Corps meeting held in the office of the chief of
Transportation of the ETO on January 18, 1945, under the Military
Railways classification, read: “Twelve ammunition trains (5,500 tons)
were moved out of Le Havre yesterday. The discharge of ammunition is
around 2,600 tons, resulting in a decrease in the backlog of
approximately 2,000 tons. Military Railways reported on the train
accident at St. Valery yesterday.” Minutes of the meeting for January
19, 1945, discuss the weak points in the supply plan, namely barge
loadings at Antivey and rail movement out of Le Havre. This sentence is
in the middle of a lengthy paragraph: “Military Railways reported that
the French at Le Havre sent all of their mechanics to the scene
of the accident at St. Valery and were therefore unable to operate the
freight trains out of that port.”
The
logistical history of the Normandy Base Section, dated June 12, 1945,
gives the only concrete reference to the tragedy: “A troop train wreck
occurred at St. Valery in District ‘A’ on 17 January 1945, at 10:30
hours in which 89 were killed and 152 injured.” It is evident that the
train was overloaded for its braking capacity and was driven by a
relatively inexperienced engineer without the benefit of a speedometer.
Despite two protests, the engineer was ordered to continue his trip by
U.S. Army Transportation Corps officials under pressure from higher
authority. It was a tragedy based on ignorance and poor judgment, for
which there was no alternative or satisfactory outcome.
On
January 17, 1945, 10-year-old Jean Claude Vigreux watched in horror as
the train tore through his town. Years later, as mayor of St. Valery, he
headed the effort by townspeople to memorialize the 89 Americans killed
in the wreck. On September 11, 1994, the citizens of St. Valery gathered
at the rebuilt railroad station and dedicated a plaque that reads: “To
the memory of the American soldiers come to free the soil of France who
were killed accidentally at St. Valery-en-Caux. The 17th of January,
1945.”
While
those killed at St. Valery have been remembered in France, there has not
been any recognition of the incident by the U.S. government to this
date. Some survivors of the wreck have even been refused treatment at
Veterans Administration hospitals in recent years on the basis that
there was no train wreck involving U.S. soldiers at St. Valery. It never
happened.
This article was written by
Russell C. Eustice for World War II
magazine.
Russell C. Eustice writes from Hillsborough, N.C. |