
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


On the morning of 5 October 1999, two passenger trains collided head-on just outside Paddington Station during the rush hour. At 08:11 a.m., a Thames Trains commuter service passed a red signal and crossed into the path of a high-speed Great Western Trains service travelling at up to 125 mph. The impact and resulting fire killed 31 people and injured more than 400, exposing deep failures in signalling safety, training, and the fragmented structure of Britain's privatised railways. In this episode of Compact Disasters, we examine what went wrong, why known risks were left unresolved, and how the Paddington crash reshaped rail safety across the UK.
Visit our website: Compact Disasters
Find us on our social media sites:
#PaddingtonCrash #LadbrokeGrove #RailDisaster #UKRail #CompactDisasters #HistoryPodcast
By Compact Disasters5
22 ratings
On the morning of 5 October 1999, two passenger trains collided head-on just outside Paddington Station during the rush hour. At 08:11 a.m., a Thames Trains commuter service passed a red signal and crossed into the path of a high-speed Great Western Trains service travelling at up to 125 mph. The impact and resulting fire killed 31 people and injured more than 400, exposing deep failures in signalling safety, training, and the fragmented structure of Britain's privatised railways. In this episode of Compact Disasters, we examine what went wrong, why known risks were left unresolved, and how the Paddington crash reshaped rail safety across the UK.
Visit our website: Compact Disasters
Find us on our social media sites:
#PaddingtonCrash #LadbrokeGrove #RailDisaster #UKRail #CompactDisasters #HistoryPodcast

78,868 Listeners

202 Listeners

66 Listeners

47,800 Listeners

2,225 Listeners

2,873 Listeners

2,171 Listeners

2 Listeners

3 Listeners

0 Listeners