On a Thursday morning, on the 5th of October 1950, a speeding New York Central streamliner wrecked in a terrific explosion and fire, but its  153 dozing passengers miraculously escaped death. More than 40 persons  were injured, none seriously.
The New England States Express, cruising through Erie at more than a  mile a minute, sliced into an oil tank car that popped out of a passing  freight train. The tanker erupted in a blast that shook downtown Erie.
Huge flames licked around the Express stainless steel coaches as 11 of  them zig-zagged to a grinding halt crosswise on the tracks. Only one car  — a dormitory for dining car employees — caught fire. One coach  carrying 50 passengers turned over on its side. The 75-car freight piled  up on a parallel track. A disaster call went out.
Within minutes some 20 doctors, 50 firemen and a like number of  policemen were at the scene. Together with hundreds of passersby and  railroad employees the rescue crews worked feverishly to free passengers  from flame-seared cars under the ominous threat of spreading fire or  new explosions. The fast-working rescuers slithered in pools of thick  oil from the smashed tanker and the battered diesel of the passenger.
Another tank car wrecked in the freight was loaded with powdered  chemical which Erie’s Fire Chief Lawrence Scully was unable to identify.  Scully's men battled the scattered blazes and prowled in the wreckage  to prevent spread of the fire. Said the fire chief: "It was one of the  most unusual fires in my experience. And it was a God's blessing that  those people escaped." Crewmen of the two trains said they were unable  to prevent the crash. 
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| The scene at the wreckage. | 
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| The scene at the wreckage. |