Person    | Male  Born 11/3/1770  Died 15/9/1830

William Huskisson

Huskisson is famous for being the victim of the first fatal railway accident (not quite true), being run over by the train known as Stevenson's Rocket, at the opening ceremony of the Manchester to Liverpool railway. He and some friends had taken a ride in a train, the Northumbrian. At Newton-le-Willow they had descended from that train when the Rocket came into view. Huskisson, weak from a recent operation, could not get out the way and fell in front of the on-coming train, which, like all trains at that time, had no brakes.

He died later that day at Eccles. There were previous fatal accidents on the railways, but Huskisson’s was the first to be widely reported. The Duke of Wellington who was present at the accident and not a friend of Huskisson, described his death as ‘an act of god’. The subsequent enquiry absolved the railways of any responsibility. Shortly after brakes became standard equipment on trains.

Huskisson had previously escaped from another unlikely accident, when a horse fell on him during his honeymoon. Born at Birtsmorton Court in Worcestershire. MP. Buried in Liverpool's St. James's Cemetery.

Peter Duby adds the following: “Member of Parliament (for Morpeth), a president of the Board of Trade and colonial secretary in 1827/28”.

Huskisson railway station, near Liverpool, opened in 1880.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
William Huskisson

Commemorated ati

Huskisson statue

Noting the stance and the toga, Osbert Sitwell described this statue as "bore...

Read More

William Huskisson

London County Council William Huskisson, 1770 - 1830, statesman lived here.

Read More

Other Subjects

Benjamin Brookman

Benjamin Brookman

Church warden of Christ Church Spitalfields in 1867.  There was a butcher with this name in Pearl Street in the Christ Church parish in 1844, who may be our man.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
W. F. Lyons

W. F. Lyons

Councillor in the Borough of Hammersmith in 1948.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Admiral, Sir Robert Stopford, GCB, GCMG

Admiral, Sir Robert Stopford, GCB, GCMG

Naval officer.  Governor of of Greenwich Hospital, 1 May 1841 until his death.  

Person, Armed Forces, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
T. C. Cooper

T. C. Cooper

A commissioner of Limehouse Library in 1900.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Thomas Rainsborough

Thomas Rainsborough

Grew up in Wapping.  A spokesman for the Levellers and a colonel in the New Model Army.  Killed by a Royalist raiding party during the siege of Pontefract.  The Levellers arranged for his funeral, ...

Person, Armed Forces, Politics & Administration

1 memorial