Two trains on the Rock Island line collided five miles west of Davenport just after dawn on November 20, 1919.
When help reached the site, the wreck looked unreal. Seven cars were thrown off the tracks—some half-buried in the dirt, others twisted into crooked piles. A cattle car had exploded into splinters. Thirty head of cattle lay dead or dying, their moans drifting across the fields. The Davenport Democrat and Leader said the pitiful sounds could be heard for blocks.
How
the three-man crew lived through it was a mystery.
Engine
No. 2529, run by engineer Thorpe, had been crushed into a tangle of iron. The
fireman crawled out first on his hands and knees, shaking and scraped raw but
alive. A witness said he looked like a man clawing his way out of the jaws of
something that meant to kill him.
