Dibbles Bridge Coach Crash (1925)
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On 27 May 1975, a
coach Coach may refer to: Guidance/instruction * Coach (sport), a director of Athletes' training and activities * Coaching, the practice of guiding an individual through a process ** Acting coach, a teacher who trains performers Transportation * Coac ...
carrying elderly passengers crashed at the bottom of a steep hill at Dibble's Bridge, near Hebden in
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, England. Thirty-three people on board were killed, including the driver, and thirteen others injured. It was the worst-ever road accident in the United Kingdom by number of fatalities.


Accident

The coach, a 1967 Bedford VAM5 run by Riley's Luxury Coaches, was carrying 45 female pensioners on a day trip from
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, North Yorkshire, to
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, in the
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. The trip was organised by Dorothy White, Lady Mayoress of Thornaby who had previously run several such trips. While driving on a downhill stretch of the B6265 road between
Greenhow Greenhow is a village in North Yorkshire, England, often referred to as Greenhow Hill. The term ''how'' derives from the Old Norse word ''haugr'' meaning a hill and a mound, so Greenhow literally means 'Green's hill or mound'. History The vil ...
and Hebden, stand-in coach driver Roger Marriott, a
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security officer, missed a gear. He then applied the brakes. The brakes had been serviced a week before the crash and had new linings, but as magistrates were later told, "defects" due to improper maintenance "meant there was no braking on the offside rear wheel". The brakes were insufficient to hold the coach, and it accelerated, heating up the brakes until they eventually failed as the coach travelled down the , 1:6 (17%, 10°) gradient from Fancarl Top to the bottom of the valley downstream of
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. After crashing through a steel crash barrier and a high stone parapet above the bank of the River Dibb, it landed on its
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roof in the garden of a cottage below. The
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sides of the coach then buckled on impact with the ground. The son-in-law of the cottage owners, London barrister (now painter and sculptor)
Lincoln Seligman Lincoln Seligman (born 1950) is a British artist, best known for his large-scale sculptures and murals displayed at modern landmark buildings worldwide. Lincoln was born the eldest son of Madron Seligman, (an industrialist and a pro-European Mem ...
, was having a barbecue with his partner in the garden at the time and was first on the scene. He later gave an eyewitness account to the '' Teesside Evening Gazette'': "There were screams. I dragged some people out ... I don't know how many". Steven Griffin, Steve Jennison and Carl Dickinson, teenagers from
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who were camping nearby, heard the crash and came to assist. One saw the bus flip over and saw the entire upper section crushed when it landed. They said the scene was silent when they arrived two minutes later, with the survivors stunned into silence. A car was flagged down and eventually one ambulance with a single driver arrived. He radioed a code which eventually brought a fleet of ambulances to ferry the injured to
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in
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. Thirty-three people on board were killed, including the driver, and thirteen others injured. It was the worst-ever road accident in the United Kingdom by number of fatalities.


Inquest

An inquest at
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, in July 1975, recorded a verdict of accidental death on the victims. Jury foreman John Mitchell said the accident was caused by the inability of the driver to negotiate the bend, owing to deficient brakes on the coach, due to possible lack of care in the maintenance of the braking system. The pathologist reported that the main cause of the loss of life was the crushing of the victims between the seats. The proprietor of the coach company, Norman Riley, was later fined £75 () for running a motor vehicle with defective brakes.


Aftermath

Even before the crash there had been a campaign to have electro-magnetic retarders fitted to all coaches. An electro-magnetic retarder uses the rotation of the axle to generate electricity, the energy for which has to come from the movement of the axle. The use of such a retarder means that the frictional brakes are kept cool for use at slow speeds. Local newspaper ''
The Yorkshire Post ''The Yorkshire Post'' is a daily broadsheet newspaper, published in Leeds, Yorkshire, England. It primarily covers stories from Yorkshire, although its masthead carries the slogan "Yorkshire's National Newspaper". It was previously owned by ...
'' staged a trial two weeks later: a coach which had been fitted with the retarder was put out of gear and allowed to run away down the hill without braking, and the retarder kept the coach's speed within safe limits. The Dibble's Bridge crash brought the issue to a wider public; ultimately, legislation was passed requiring improved braking systems. A memorial service was held at St Paul's Church, Thornaby, in May 2015 to mark the 40th anniversary of the crash. A stone memorial was unveiled outside
Thornaby Town Hall Thornaby Town Hall is a municipal building in the Mandale Road in Thornaby-on-Tees, North Yorkshire, England. The building, which is owned by Thornaby Town Council, is a Grade II listed building. History In anticipation of the proposed merger o ...
on the 47th anniversary of the crash in May 2022.


See also

*
1925 Dibbles Bridge coach crash On 10 June 1925, a coach crashed at the bottom of a steep hill at Dibbles Bridge, near Hebden in North Yorkshire, England. Seven people were killed and 11 others injured. Accident The accident occurred when a 30-seater coach carrying a part ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Dibbles Bridge coach crash 1975 disasters in the United Kingdom 1975 in England 1975 road incidents 1970s in North Yorkshire Bus incidents in England May 1975 in the United Kingdom Transport disasters in Yorkshire