Montparnasse Derailment: When A Train Went Through A Station's Walls

By | September 27, 2019

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A dramatic snapshot photograph of a derailed steam locomotive at Montparnasse Station, Paris, taken by an unknown photographer. Source: (Photo by SSPL/Getty Images)

You know what they say about train wrecks---we can't look away---and this now-iconic French photograph of a train dangling from a building has inspired double-takes for more than 100 years. The fact that the Montparnasse derailment, as the accident has become known, somehow managed to avoid killing a single person onboard is as amazing as the sheer sight of it. Let's take a closer look at this bizarre incident. 

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The Granville-Paris Express was going too fast when it entered the station. Source: (sunnyfortuna.com)

Coming in Hot

The Granville-Paris Express, carrying 131 passengers and pulling three luggage cars, a post car, and six-passenger cars, had gotten behind schedule on October 22, 1895. The train's conductor tried to shave off some time by speeding up, which meant that he was going way too fast as he approached the station. Naturally, he tried to stop, but the train's air brakes failed. At 4:00 P.M., the train came barreling through the Gare Montparnasse terminal, plowed through the safety bumper, slid across the concourse and smashed right through the 2 feet of bricks that comprised the station's exterior wall.