On 6th November 2004
the level crossing was visited by 48 year old hotel chef Bryan Drysdale. After
driving down the country road he slowed down at the crossing until his car came
to a complete stop on the railway tracks where he turned off the engine and sat
waiting for the next train to come. His intention was to commit suicide.
He had become tormented by his own
thoughts, convinced he had HIV and was becoming more and more mentally
unstable, struggling with his sexuality. Today he was going to end all this for
good. But what he didn’t take into account was what the impact of a high speed
train hitting a car would do and just how much damage his action would be
responsible for.
With almost 200 passengers on board,
the 1735 from London Paddington bound for Plymouth sped down the line, the
driver seeing the car and taking the correct actions to try and stop the train
in time, but it was impossible to not collide at that speed. At 1812 that
evening the front of the train slammed into Drysdales car and immediately
derailed all eight coaches.
Calls immediately went out to the
emergency services with 20 ambulances, 14 fire engines and a host of police and
other rescuers flooding the scene. The wreckage of the train resembled a child’s
toy thrown to the other side of the level crossing and left in a heap.
Drysdale died instantly, the
driver of the train was dead as were five of his passengers (one of whom died
in the hospital later). Another 66 others were injured, a dozen of them seriously.
It was a miracle that so many others were uninjured physically.
The official investigation blamed
the car driver for the crash, returning a verdict of suicide for Drysdale and
unlawful killing for the six train victims.
Over the years there were four
more fatalities at the crossing causing locals to push for a bridge to be built
over the crossing, this was made a reality and opened in December 2016.
At the site of the disaster a
simple memorial which I visited in 2013 pays tribute to those who died. This
has since been turned into a memorial garden with a circular bench as an Area
of Reflection, a place where those who want to remember the victims of both the
rail crash and the subsequent deaths can do without the interruptions of
traffic.
Ufton Nervet is now once again a
peaceful place.
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