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A deadly train crash

A head-on collision between a passenger train and a freight train that was described as "one of the worst wrecks ever experienced by the Seaboard Air Line" happened 100 years ago today in Hamlet NC.

The passenger train was a "colored excursion" from Durham, headed to Charlotte. The freight train, coming from Wilmington, was under the impression that it had the all-clear. The collision happened right in front of the roundhouse. Photo courtesy of the NC State Archives.

The track at this place makes a sharp curve and both sides of the mainline were lined with box and coal cars. The freight train was crawling into the yards under the impression that no train was coming and Engineer Koonce was heading for Hamlet at a good clip, sure also that the track was clear. The two engines lie now beside the track fast to each other in a grasp of death. The wrecking crew have so far been unable to separate them. The crash was heard all over town and the whistles of the round house and the sound of the escaping steam from the contending engines called the whole town to the scene of carnage and death.

Newspaper accounts of the accident include graphic descriptions of the injured, including one passenger who was asleep until he was decapitated. A field hospital was set up under a repair shed to tend to the injured.

The task was great. Sixty people were seriously injured. Twenty-eight more were slightly scratched. Seven were dead, and of the sixty, one died while on the table. Mrs. Landrum, a trained nurse from the Presbyterian hospital, Charlotte, was nursing a case in town and volunteered her services. She gave skilled aid in a very trying position.

Some of the injured were put on another train and taken to the hospital in Charlotte. Because so much of the train had been damaged, uninjured passengers had to remain in Hamlet because there were no cars to transport them.

The excursion was being run by the St. Joseph's Methodist church of Durham, and was scheduled to reach Charlotte at noon and return tonight. The excursionists will return to Durham with heavy hearts and without seeing Charlotte. -- The News & Observer 7/28/1911

The Interstate Commerce Commission investigated the accident  and determined that the dispatcher for the freight train, Mr. Purvis, sent a message that the passenger train had cleared the track. Although the dispatchers for both trains were working in the same room, Mr. Purvis failed to verify this information before sending the message.

Health officials to distribute pills to residents living near Shearon Harris nuclear plant

Local health officials in a four-county area near the Shearon Harris nuclear power plant will be distributing potassium iodide pills to residents living within 10 miles of the nuclear plant.

Potassium iodide pills, known as KI pills, are an over-the-counter medication that can reduce the risk of thyroid cancer from radioactive exposure. The pills are being distributed free of charge to help prevent health risks during a nuclear accident.

The pills are not to be ingested unless residents are directed to take the pills during an emergency. Officials warn that the KI pills are not an alternative for evacuation during a nuclear accident.

Officials in Wake, Chatham, Harnett and Lee counties will be giving away the pills at local public schools and other locations on May 15. Some will also distribute the pills on May 22.

Local health officials began distributing the pills in 2002 within the nuclear plant's 10-mile Emergency Planning Zone. The cost of the pills is covered by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

About 74,000 people live within 10 miles of the nuclear plant, up from about 15,000 when the plant began operating in 1986.

1272295564 Health officials to distribute pills to residents living near Shearon Harris nuclear plant The News and Observer Copyright 2011 The News and Observer . All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

First aid for dunked phones

There are two types of anglers in this world: Those who have dropped their cell phones in the water, and those who will.

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