Railway Accident: Ongarue
When: 6 July 1923
Where: Ongarue, North Island
What happened
- At about 6:00 am on 6 July, 1923, the southbound Auckland to Wellington express rounded a sharp bend and ploughed into a landslip which had fallen across the railway line near Ongarue, just north of Taumarunui.
- Caught between the rails in the mountain of mud and rocks was a large boulder about 1.25 metres in diameter. The engine was able to push the boulder for a short distance, but then the weight of it threw the engine, tender and postal van off the track.
- Passengers at the back of the train slept through the upheaval, but the first three passenger carriages suffered the most damage and the most casualties.
- The second carriage smashed into and through the first carriage, but was then hit by the following carriage which drove up onto the top of the second carriage.
- A gas container under the third carriage burst into flames, adding the danger of fire, but it was smothered by a further slip.
- The carriages following behind were around the bend and out of the line of shock, and so suffered only shaking and broken windows.
- The first three carriages were smashed together, trapping the survivors who had to be cut free. Rescuers from Ongarue worked with the uninjured passengers to help the injured.
- At least 12 passengers were killed outright in the impact. Three badly-injured people died on the way to hospital. The engine driver and the fireman both were badly burnt.
How many died: 17 passengers (28 injured)
Other events and outcomes
- The train crash at Ongarue was the first major loss of life on New Zealand railways.
- A board of inquiry found that the accident was the result of heavy rain which caused the slip.
- The fitting of electric lights in railway carriages was made a priority to avoid the risk of fire from the gas containers, and carriages were strengthened to reduce the chance of "telescoping" into one another in future accidents.
Sources
- Conly, Geoff. On the track: Tangiwai and other railway accidents. Wellington, 1991

