Museum of History & Industry
Sophie Frye Bass Library
2700 24th Avenue East
Seattle, WA 98112
Phone: 206-324-1126
URL: http://www.seattlehistory.org



Guide to the Great Northern Railway Wellington Disaster Records, 1907-1911


1995.51





Finding aid prepared by Jody Hendrickson

Finding aid encoded by Jody Hendrickson, 2007


Overview of the Collection

 
Repository Name:
 

Museum of History & Industry
Sophie Frye Bass Library

2700 24th Avenue East
Seattle, WA 98112
Phone: 206-324-1126
URL: http://www.seattlehistory.org

 
Collection Number:
 

1995.51

 
Creator:
 

Great Northern Railway Company (U.S.)

 
Title:
 

Great Northern Railway Company Wellington Disaster records

 
Dates:
 

1907-1911 (inclusive)
1910 (bulk)

 
Quantity:
 

.21 cubic feet, including 12 photographs
1 box

 
Languages:
 

Collection materials are in English. 

 
Summary:
 

Great Northern Railway Company records, including photographs, from the avalanche disaster near Wellington, Washington

 
Location of Collection:
 

15a.1.6

 

Historical Note

On February 23, 1910 , two Great Northern Railway trains--the "Seattle Express" local passenger train No. 25 and Fast Mail train No. 27--were stalled on the tracks at the Cascade Tunnel Station on Stevens Pass, thwarted by heavy snows and slides. By late the following evening, crews were able to move enough snow to allow the trains to pass westward over the summit through the Cascade tunnel, where they were stopped again just past Wellington, a small railway town where many Great Northern employees lived. As the train sat under the slope of Windy Mountain and above Tye Creek, crews worked around the clock to clear the snow but were unable to keep up with the continuous heavy snowfall and frequent slides. The situation was complicated by insufficient coal to run the plows, tired and underpaid snow shovelers walking off the job, and the loss of communications when telegraph lines went down. On the last day of February, an electrical storm arrived, bringing winds, thunder and lightning, all threats to the stability of the varied layers of snow on the mountainside. Previous clear cutting and forest fires had cleared the slopes above the tracks, contributing to the ideal conditions for an avalanche. During the early hours of March 1, either thunder or lightning caused a break in the integrity of the heavy top slab of snow; as the weaker layers below gave way, the enormous slab began to slide down the slope, carrying with it everything in its path. The avalanche pushed both trains 150 feet down into the Tye River Valley, where the cars were buried in snow and debris. Ninety six people died--thirty-five passengers and sixty-one railroad employees-- making the Wellington avalanche one of the worst train disasters in United States history. Over the following days, rescue crews transported bodies down the mountain on toboggans; the injured were taken to Wenatchee. The last of the victims was not recovered until the end of July.

The Great Northern Railway Company spent three weeks repairing the tracks before trains were able to run over Stevens Pass again. In the aftermath of the disaster, the town was renamed Tye to avoid the negative associations of the name Wellington. By 1913, the Great Northern had constructed snow-sheds over the nine miles of tracks between Scenic and Tye to protect trains from snow slides. The depot at Wellington was closed with the opening of the New Cascade Tunnel in 1929.

In the immediate aftermath of the disaster, accusations against Great Northern by the survivors, the labor unions, the press and the public became so intense that a coroner's inquest was held to determine officially whether human fault played a role in the disaster. Though the verdict placed the cause of the accident "beyond human control," it also listed three points of criticism--the insufficiency of coal, the laborers' low wages, and the decision to place the train in an unsafe location--which could be used for future lawsuits against Great Northern. Indeed, the company subsequently had to contend with a flood of legal claims from victims' relatives, freight customers, and employees. The company resolved some of these claims without admitting liability by making humanitarian payments to families. Eventually the Great Northern legal team brought a test case to trial--a $40,000 claim brought on behalf of a child whose father died in the disaster. Though the jury ruled in favor of the plaintiff, the verdict was reversed on appeal, and the Great Northern Railway Company was ultimately found not negligent or liable for the disaster at Wellington.

Content Description

The collection consists of Great Northern records, most or all of which appear to have been generated by the Legal Department. These include twelve photographs of the aftermath of the disaster, clippings, and a legal file consisting mainly of correspondence among various Great Northern attorneys, and between attorneys and claim agents. The correspondence from the days immediately following the disaster concerns the sorting out of the facts and responding to criticism and questions of liability; it includes coded telegrams sent between company officials, some of which include handwritten translations of coded words. Some of the correspondence concerns the coroner's inquest; a statement of the verdict is also included. Later correspondence concerns specific claims by various parties--employees, victims' relatives, and companies with goods being shipped--for compensation from the company in the months following the incident.

Among the correspondents are J.D. Armstrong, Great Northern's assistant general solicitor in St. Paul; D.H. Kimball, General Claims Agent; and Louis W. Hill, President of Great Northern and son of railroad "Empire Builder" James J. Hill, founder of the Great Northern Railway.

Though the photographs in the collection are not attributed, they are believed to have be taken by J.A. Juleen. Juleen took photographs of the scene soon after the avalanche; he may have been working for the Great Northern Railway Company.

Administrative Information

Acquisition Information 

Gift of George Fischer, 1995

Use of the Collection

Alternative Forms Available 

Copies of the original photographs and a photocopy of the legal file are available for viewing.

Restrictions on Access 

The collection is open to the public by appointment.

Restrictions on Use 

The Museum of History & Industry is the owner of the materials in the Sophie Frye Bass Library and makes available reproductions for research, publication, and other uses. Written permission must be obtained from MOHAI before any reproduction use. The museum does not necessarily hold copyright to all of the materials in the collections. In some cases, permission for use may require seeking additional authorization from the copyright owners.

Preferred Citation 

Great Northern RailwayWellington Disaster Records, Museum of History & Industry, Seattle

Related Information

Bibliography 
  • Krist, Gary. The White Cascade. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 2007.
  • Related Materials 

    MOHAI has additional photographs of the Wellington avalanche in its subject files.

    Subjects

    This collection is indexed under the following headings in the online catalog. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons, or places should search the catalog using these headings.

     
    United States--Washington (State)--Tye
    Avalanches--Washington (State)--Tye
    Disaster victims--Washington (State)--Tye
    Railroad accidents--Washington (State)--Tye
    Other Creators :
    Juleen, John A.--Photographs (photographer)

    Detailed Description of the Collection

    The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.


     

    Photographs, 1910 March

    Juleen, J.A.
    12 photographs
    5" x 7"
     
    Container(s)
    Description
    Dates
     
    box/folder
    1/1


    1995.51.1:  Man among wreckage
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.2:  View of wreckage
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.3:  Men pulling body on sled to Wellington
     (image/jpeg) 
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.4:  Remains of rotary snowplow
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.5:  Bodies wrapped in blankets lined up on shelves, probably in depot baggage room
     (image/jpeg) 
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.6:  Men working among wreckage
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.7:  View of wreckage
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.8:  Men working among wreckage
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.9:  Wreckage of train car 8201
     (image/jpeg) 
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.10:  View of wreckage
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.11:  View northeast towards Wellington, showing depot, Bailets hotel and wrecked cabin
      1910 March
     


    1995.51.12:  Men working on slope above wreckage of train car 8201
      1910 March

     

    Legal department correspondence and other records

     
    Container(s)
    Description
    Dates
     
    box
    1


    1995.51.29:  Legal file No. 1372, Part 1
      1907 February; 1910 March 2-November 18
     
    approximately 220 pages
    Largely correspondence among Great Northern lawyers, and between lawyers and claim agents, regarding claims for loss of personal baggage, shipping losses and for compensation by families of victims of the disaster. Also includes two letters predating the disaster (1907): a letter from Superintendent W.D. Scott recommending the building of snowsheds between Scenic and Leavenworth and a detailed reply outlining railway responses to recent slides in the area.
     
    box/folder
    ½


    1995.51.26-.28:  Lawsuit correspondence, depositions and brief
      1910 July-1911 July
     
    Possibly Part II of File 1372 described above. Includes file for lawsuit (Rosen & Herman and Fichel Bros. vs. J.C. Fargo as President of American Express Company) regarding a shipment lost in the Wellington disaster; file includes correspondence and depositions. Also includes files for case Railroad Commission of Washington vs. Great Northern Railway Company regarding the deaths of railway workers at the Wellington site; and other correspondence regarding legal claims in the aftermath of the disaster.
     
    1/3

    1995.51.13-.14:  Memos
      1910 March 1-2
     
    2 memos
    Memos signed W.C. Watrous, forwarding the text of telegrams from railway superintendents. The first quotes Superintendent James O'Neill's telegram notifying company officials of the avalanche, and the second contains the text of a telegram from Superintendent Bowen (?) reporting the death of watchman Fred Johnson in a slide at Drury.
     


    1995.51.15:  Cost of Washington Snow Slide
      1911 April 11
     
    On Great Northern Railway Company Legal Department letterhead, a list of total amount paid out to employees in settlements, for funeral expenses and other expenses (totaling $37, 114.02)

     

    Newspaper file, 1910 March 2-19

    File of front pages of Seattle Post-Intelligencer in the aftermath of the avalanche. The newspapers are between covers printed with "Great Northern Railway Legal Department." Small stickers on each paper indicate that they came from the office of R.I. Farrington, 2nd Vice President of the Great Northern Railway.
     
     
    Container(s)
    Description
    Dates
     
    box/folder
    1/4


    1995.51.19:  Headline: "Sixty swept to instant death by avalanche"
      1910 March 2
     


    1995.51.20:  Headline: "First official list of dead, missing and injured in avalanche"
      1910 March 3
     


    1995.51.21:  Headline: "Ten persons taken alive from excavated car"
      1910 March 4
     


    1995.51.22:  Headline: "Long funeral trains with bodies of slide victims start for the outside"
      1910 March 5
     


    1995.51.23:  Headline: "Ninety-two dead and fourteen are injured in Revelstoke slide"
      1910 March 6
     


    1995.51.24:  Front page article: "Coroner to find if human fault aided avalanche"
      1910 March 9
     


    1995.51.25:  Front page article: "Avalanche due to act of God, says railroad"
      1910 March 10