1951 train
wreck recalled in tears
Published in the Home News Tribune 2/05/01
BY CHANDRA M. HAYSLETT
STAFF WRITER
WOODBRIDGE: Helen Anders Rader could
hardly hold back tears yesterday as she recalled the horrific aftermath
of the Pennsylvania Railroad commuter train crash that derailed 50 years
ago in Woodbridge.

JODY SOMERS photo
Councilman Frank Pelzman, Pearl Selinger, a wreck survivor,
Councilman Charles Kenny, Frank LaPenta, Woodbridge Historical
Association vice president, and Assemblyman John Wisniewski
unveil a plaque to be displayed at the Woodbridge train station. |
"It was an absolute disaster. There
were bodies everywhere. It's something you never, ever forget. People
walking around bloody. Their families were devasted. It was
horrible," said Rader, 74, who was a nurse at Perth Amboy Hospital
at the time of the accident.
More than 80 people were killed and more
than 500 injured on Feb. 6, 1951, when "The Broker," named for
the number of passengers who took the train to their jobs in Wall
Street, tried to cross a temporary trestle. Blamed for the accident were
the train's speed and a lack of warning lights for the trestle.
Trying to keep the memories alive of
those who lost their lives and those who helped survivors, family and
friends gathered yesterday at United Methodist Church in Woodbridge. The
same church opened its doors for survivors who had nowhere to go after
the accident 50 years ago.
"Today, we honor the nurses, police
and firemen . . . We honor the residents on Fulton Street, who opened up
their homes as first-aid stations . . . We honor the average citizen who
came that night to help," said Frank LaPenta, who lived just a few
blocks from the accident and was one of the first to arrive at the
scene.
"At 19, it was difficult to
understand what I was seeing. Passengers were strapped in twisted cars,
trying to climb out of broken windows," he said to about 150 people
at the memorial service sponsored by the Woodbridge Historical
Association, which LaPenta heads.
The memorial service gave survivors and
witnesses a chance to talk about the tragedy. Police, first-aid squads
and firemen were presented with certificates of appreciation. A plaque
from NJ Transit, which has used the line since 1983, was unveiled and
will be posted at the Woodbridge train station as a reminder of the
wreck.
"I was in the second car from the
front. The car fell down an embankment. When I woke up, a seat was lying
across my back and dead people were on top of me," remembered Pearl
Selinger, 75, of East Brunswick.
The train was unusually crowded that
Tuesday because union members of the Jersey Central, a train that ran
almost parallel to the Pennsylvania Railroad line, were on strike.
It was also the first day the temporary
trestle was being used. It had been built to provide a detour while the
line was being upgraded during construction of the New Jersey Turnpike.
Eights days before the wreck, train engineers were given notice that
beginning at 1:01 p.m. Feb. 6, trains were to slow down to 25 mph
through Woodbridge. They normally traveled at 60 mph.
About a mile from Woodbridge, with the
train still racing between 50 mph and 60 mph, the engine crossed the
trestle. The first and second cars fell on their side, while the third
and fourth, in which most of the deaths occurred, crashed into each
other.
George Dowden, 80, said he normally sat
in the third car but had to stand in the fifth car because the train was
so crowded.
"I'm here because the Lord planned
it that way," Dowden of Livingston said. "The wreck definitely
made me appreciate life."
Elene Dwyer, 72, a survivor of the
accident, didn't realize how tragic the wreck was until yesterday, while
looking at photos set up in the church.
"I look at these pictures and could
almost cry," she said. "I don't remember it being this bad
because I was probably in shock. A lot of people didn't talk about
it." |