logo
Fiery 1960 rail disaster killed 14, but it brought out the best in Bakersfield

Fiery 1960 rail disaster killed 14, but it brought out the best in Bakersfield

Yahoo19-03-2025

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — Hageman Road once cut a straight and direct east-west line through the alfalfa fields and grazing pastures of northwest Bakersfield, including the tiny farm town of Green Acres. Not anymore – not completely.
Now, Hageman has a bump – a curved, northerly detour near Allen Road. The road then curves back to the south before resuming its straight course.
The reason for the rerouting: So that Hageman approaches the Santa Fe railroad tracks at a 90-degree angle, rather than the acute, visibility-skewing angle it took at 5:08 p.m. on March 2nd, 1960.
That's the moment all of Bakersfield shook with the hellish roar of death. The moment a geyser of fire shot 100 feet into the sky. The moment the Santa Fe Railway's Chicago-bound San Francisco Chief passenger train – flying down the tracks at 75 mph, and perhaps faster — smashed into a big rig pulling two trailers containing 8-thousand gallons of highly volatile, freshly refined Kern County fuel oil.
The explosion killed 14 people instantly.
63 others – many of them broken, burned or both – were hospitalized.
The worst train wreck in Kern County history made the front page of the New York Times and inspired a years-long safety review and infrastructure improvements that we still enjoy today.
And it happened 65 years ago.
The driver of the fuel truck – owned by Oglesby Brothers Petroleum Transportation Company – was 48-year-old John Garrett of Bakersfield. There were no rail-crossing arms at the intersection to warn vehicle traffic, only a reflector-sign on the side of the road. A coroner's inquest found that the train, a diesel electric, sounded its horn several times, but Garrett proceeded across the tracks anyway at 5 or 6 mph.
The big rig driver may have realized, in his final moments, what was happening, because witnesses told investigators he turned his vehicle so it was almost parallel to the tracks as the thundering Chief bore down – behind schedule, according to a Santa Fe official, and so possibly exceeding the prescribed speed. The 11-car passenger train might have been going as fast as 90.
We'll never know what Garrett was thinking because he was immediately incinerated. The explosion of metal against metal sent flaming oil raining down. 11 of the 83 passengers were killed, along with two Santa Fe employees, engineer Lanson Snyder and fireman A.H. Brawley, both of Fresno. Their charred bodies were found some distance from the front of the train, as if they had tried to scramble away at the last instant.
Astronauts return home aboard SpaceX capsule after being stuck for 9 months
The train rumbled on for a quarter-mile after the crash before it twisted and jerked to an agonizing halt. Some of the cars hung precariously over a 30-foot embankment.
The screams of the trapped, injured and dying pierced the steady roar of the flames.
22-year-old Earl Blakely, a year out of the Army, had just arrived home from work when his father, Fred Blakely called.
'My father said, 'Earl, we've got a bad accident out here,' so I immediately got out here as fast as I could,' said Blakely. 'And we just started working, trying to get people out of the cars.'
Fred Blakely had recently plowed his fields, and ambulances arriving on the scene couldn't get traction in the loose dirt to reach train cars containing the injured.
The farmers of Rosedale and Greenacres came to the rescue.
'It looked like a sea of tractors, coming this way. And they were going across Allen Road,' said Blakely.
A convoy of farm tractors converged on the crash scene to tow the ambulances into position. As doctors tended to the wounded, tractors scraped and flattened the ground so the ambulances could get out again.
24-year-old, Bob Hodel, was driving a company car home from Cal Kern Farm Supply when, about a mile directly ahead, he saw the eruption of flames and the plume of black smoke.
Hodel, now 89, drove straight to the crash scene, arriving before any first responders.
'I was one of the first ones there,' said Hodel. 'I drove up on it and I came upon the carnage. I couldn't believe that,' said Hodel. 'Like Pick-Up Sticks…the cars were all kind of ways and it was a mess. People were coming out of windows. When I drove behind the train wreck and got out of my car there were screams and there was a lot of chaos, then I happened to see him under the metal. And he needed the most help, I thought, and so I centered on him.'
The man's name was Archie, a young man about Hodel's age, and he was buried in twisted metal from the waist down.
'I don't know how he lived,' said Hodel.
Hodel quickly drove home, grabbed his father's acetylene welding torch, and hustled back. For the next several hours, assisted by four or five others, Hodel painstakingly cut away the steel.
'Anyway, we talked to him for about three hours to keep him going. We knew that when we would release the metal that the blood would flown, so we had a doctor there,' said Hodel. 'I remember we lifted the metal up that was pressing his thigh down and it wasn't pleasant. We got him out of there.'
19-year-old Stephen Preston came upon the same nightmarish scene, pulling up alongside the tracks in his red-and-white 1959 Chevy Impala. Preston, now 84 and living in Contra Costa County, had just gotten off work at Brock's Department Store downtown and was driving home.
He lived with his parents, in a house directly behind their family-run, roadside hamburger joint – Glen's Drive-In, which occupied the spot on Rosedale Highway where Country Boy Drive-in now stands.
He saw some haunting things that evening.
'The first passenger car was on its side with the floor partially broken open and you could see, pretty sure it was a man, except he was looking like soup cans, and you could see him through this crack,' said Preston. 'There were three of us and somebody got an axe so we could break some of that metal away and we pulled him out, but he was dead, deceased.'
The eastbound Chief, which left the East Bay city of Richmond, near Oakland, just before noon the morning of the crash, was in pieces.
The Santa Fe Train's four diesel engines, two baggage cars and the first three passenger cars had hurtled off the tracks and lay scattered across a pasture, tangled in a grotesque, geometric design. The inferno was so hot, the truck's motor had been fused into the jumbled, molten mass of the train engine.
Physicians climbed over and around the wreckage, feeling for pulses. Rescue crews rushed cutting torches to the scene to pull out trapped passengers. Floodlights turned the gathering dark into a false day as dozens, then hundreds, gathered at the site of destruction.
Fred and Flossie Blakely's thousand-square foot house was only about 100 yards from the crash scene. With the Blakelys' permission, rescue workers, Santa Fe officials, law enforcement, media and aid workers moved in.
'As the evening wore on, Salvation Army ladies came on and my mom turned the inside of her house over to them and they did a wonderful job. They made sandwiches until there were no more sandwiches to be made,' said Blakely.
Cranes explored the tangled mess looking for survivors – almost tenderly, in the words of a reporter for United Press International. One man, badly injured, finally was freed after eight hours. It could have been worse.
Only one of the truck's two trailers exploded.
'A lot of people were walking around zombie-like. They were in shock, I'm sure…some of them were just staring at this thing wondering, 'Well, what happened,' I think,' said Preston.
It took a dozen fire companies two hours to finally quench the raging flames, and many more hours for first responders to extract all of the passengers, living and dead.
One man who rushed to the scene said he ran about 300 yards to the nearest passenger car. Children inside were crying.
Passengers broke windows and passed the children through, into the arms of those waiting outside to take them.
Radio stations put out a call for blood donations for the injured and the city responded with more than 250 pints. The crash took the life of one of the San Joaquin Valley's most distinguished medical scientists, Dr. Marshall J. Fiese, director of health services at Fresno State College.
Dr. Fiese was prominent among those combating valley fever.
The morning after the crash, Fred Blakely found a huge section of severed rail on his property.
'From where that piece of steel came off the rails, it threw it 250 feet through the air,' said Blakely.
Santa Fe welders cut up the shattered rail into sections and hammered it into anvils, which they gave away to farmers from around the area who came to help out.
The railroad people left the Blakelys with another souvenir. A melted rail car.
'They left the car intact. And they came out here with big excavators, not this modern kind we have now,' said Blakely. 'And they just kept digging until they got it deep enough and wide enough and long enough, they dropped it in there with big cranes and covered it up. That's a big hole.'
As far as anyone knows, that melted passenger rail car is still buried somewhere alongside the railroad tracks, in the Santa Fe right-of-way, southeast of Allen and Hageman roads.
Four days after the crash, Bob Hodel brought his mother Lydia to Mercy Hospital to visit Archie. Mother Hodel, who inspired so many of the recipes at Hodel's – the still-popular restaurant Bob Hodel would open seven years later – brought some of her renowned coffee cake. Archie wrote a letter of thanks after he recovered and made it home to Louisiana.
The pages of the Bakersfield Californian were filled with letters of gratitude – both from victims from around the country who'd finally made it home and from locals.
'For Bakersfield, it was an event, it was a real event, and we were able to pitch in and did what we could,' said Blakely.
For Earl Blakely, the whole tragic experience told him something important about his hometown.
'The folks in this whole Rosedale area – it was wonderful. I mean, what happened was not wonderful, it was horrible. But people all came together. They were all coming over with tools and so forth that they might never have seen again, but that wasn't the issue,' said Blakely. 'It was like what you would expect people to do.'
Days after the crash, a state legislative committee launched a probe of oil tank truck accidents.
Existing laws already required certain vehicles, including school buses and oil tankers, to stop at all rail crossings, regardless of whether a train was known to be approaching. But the legislature wanted to know what more could be done.
Why John Garrett did not stop at the rail crossing was never clear – he had worked for Oglesby Brothers for 10 years and was on his second delivery trip of the day to the Humble Oil Company storage facility. Perhaps he was anxious to get home for dinner to his wife and 11-year-old son, and with no crossing arm to stop him, perhaps he daydreamed himself right into the path of the train.
The cause of the wreck could not be officially determined; the truck driver's death made it impossible.
Oglesby Brothers was named in 39 of the 40 lawsuits filed by the families of crash victims but the company stayed in business until 1979.
The San Francisco Chief, which started its daily run between Chicago and the San Francisco Bay Area in 1954, shut down in 1971, when Amtrak began operations.
Today, a concrete train trestle crosses over Allen Road at Santa Fe Way, near Hageman, where the wreck took place, so the possibility of some kind of repeat incident is virtually nonexistent.
The general problem still persists.
Even though the grade crossing collision rate has dropped every year since 1978, many hundreds are killed every year. In 2024, the U.S. saw 2,045 highway-rail grade crossing collisions, resulting in 252 fatalities and 653 injuries.
The rail industry continues to make a compelling case for highway safety – imploring that we respect the speed, weight and power of trains. They always win these collisions – except, as in cases like the 1960 disaster, everyone loses.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The 22 Coziest Father's Day Gifts For Homebody Dads
The 22 Coziest Father's Day Gifts For Homebody Dads

Buzz Feed

time3 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

The 22 Coziest Father's Day Gifts For Homebody Dads

Whether it be for Father's Day, a holiday or birthday gift, I am definitely among the many who find it difficult to shop for their dad. However, I find that things get easier when I try to hone in on meaningful gifts that he'll actually enjoy and that are representative of who he is as a person, as opposed to just grabbing a generic 'man gift.' And while whiskey stones and camping accessories are all well and good, not every dad is a big drinker or outdoor aficionado. So if you've got a gentle, indoor dad who appreciates creature comforts and little luxuries (like mine), then this Father's Day gift guide is for you. Below, I've rounded up the very best cozy and comforting Father's Day gifts for homebody dads, from weighted blankets and an e-reader for quiet nights in to a luxurious new leather wallet, classic slippers, a neck and shoulder massager and much more. Each one will help him lean into a bit of self-care and, most importantly, help him feel loved and appreciated. What could be better than that? A foot-hugging recovery slide Breathable and supportive, these sturdy slides have a gently firm orthotic insole that doesn't 'sink' the way other overly squishy recovery shoes tend to. They feature a rubber outsole that makes them the ideal indoor/outdoor shoe. Perfect for the dad who needs a little extra cushioning under his feet, they come in three different colors and men's sizes 7– them from Kuru for $99. 1861: The Lost Peace by Jay Winik If your dad loves to curl up with a good book, then he's going to love sinking his teeth into this account of the weeks leading up to the start of the war. This book is surprisingly gripping and gives readers a look at President Lincoln's mindset, the lengths he and his cabinet went to avoid war and introduces new readers to the many ways these leaders attempted to keep peace. Written by New York Times bestselling author Jay Winik, 1861: The Lost Peace is surprisingly timely and is sure to give even the most avid Civil War buffs new material to think it from Amazon for $32. A soft new sweatshirt to add to his collection Champion fleece sweatshirts remain some of the best in the game, and this timeless option is great for dad's more casual days. It's available in seven colors and sizes S to it from Amazon for $14.15+. A wildly soft blanket emblazoned with beloved family photos If your dad is a super cozy person who loves curling up with a blanket and a good book or show, you can't go wrong with this customized photo blanket. It displays eight different photos surrounding a personalized message and comes in a variety of materials like microfiber fleece, plush fleece or luxe fuzzy it from Shutterfly for $39.99+ (originally $79.98+; available in three sizes). A light-blocking sleep mask that won't put pressure on his eyes Manta's sleep masks are ultra-popular thanks to their multi-tasking ability to protect the wearer's sleep. The adjustable eye cups mold right to the contours of the user's face to block out all the light without putting uncomfy pressure on the eyes. They're made with a breathable cotton strap that won't snag, with subtle closures and elastics to keep it secure and it from Amazon for $39. A soft, luxurious and deliciously lightweight robe Parachute's Cloud cotton robe is the perfect example of an everyday basic made more special. It has a lovely, delicate texture that is as cozy and comforting as it is stylish. It's the kind of thing dad would never buy for himself but deserves. Time to replace the ratty one he's been using for years with one of these beauties. It's available in nine colors and sizes XS to 3X. Get it from Parachute for $103+ (originally $129). A pair of classic striped Adidas joggers You can't go wrong with these iconic striped Adidas sweats; they're great for lounging, running errands and more. They look crisp and stylish but couldn't be comfier. Get them in one of six colors in sizes XS to them from Adidas for $56+ (originally $70). A lovely cashmere sweater No dad can ever have too many cashmere sweaters, and this one from Quince has a sophisticated, timeless crewneck silhouette that he'll enjoy for many seasons to come. He'll love it come fall, or, if he runs cold like my dad, will probably put it to use much sooner. It's available in six colors in sizes S–XXL, made with Mongolian cashmere and is deliciously lightweight, soft and it from Quince for $59.90 (originally $138). A big water bottle with a unique straw/spout opening This popular stainless steel water bottle is ideal for using at home, in the car or on the go and an excellent way to help dad stay hydrated. It has a double-wall insulation that can keep drinks cold for up to 24 hours, a wide opening so he can clean it or add ice with ease and a base that will fit into most cupholders. It's available in four sizes and 21 it from Amazon for $24.99+. A pair of cushy cloud slippers If the mere thought of a soft, warm slipper is going to make your dad overheat, consider these plush, cushioned cloud slippers instead. They're wildly popular thanks to their comfortable shape and breathable material. They're lightweight, with a thick, shock-absorbing sole. I have a pair and they just couldn't be more comfortable. They're available in men's sizes 3–14 and 15 them from Amazon for $20.35+. A coffee subscription to Trade Coffee Trade Coffee's gift subscriptions make it easy for coffee devotees to try myriad different kinds of fresh craft coffee from the comfort of home. It's ideal for a coffee-loving dad who wants to travel the world via his morning cup of joe without leaving his favorite lounger. It's a very special way to discover new coffees from some of the best roasters it from Trade Coffee for $40+. A cool carafe for their desktop or bedside With three colors to pick from, this gorgeous Our Place carafe is as versatile as it is beautiful. It has a custom-designed filtering lid along with a cold brew infuser and a wine aerator. He won't know how he went this long without it from Our Place for $129. A pair of powerful binoculars Who doesn't love to sit in their yard and peep at the visiting birds? A pair of binoculars will enhance the experience tenfold. These have a wide field of view, 12 times magnification, adjustable eye cups that can be worn with eyeglasses and an easily adjustable focus. Get it from Amazon for $27.53. A heated Shiatsu back, neck and shoulder massager Everyone loves a little massage, even if they're not necessarily always achy. This massager has eight deep-tissue kneading modes and infrared heating that can ease muscle tension. It's made with mesh and faux leather that is breathable and easy to clean and has three adjustable speeds so your dad can customize his massage to his it from Amazon for $29.99+ (available in three colors). A chic new leather bifold wallet Chances are high that your dad has been rocking the same tattered wallet for decades, making a fancy new one a great gift idea. This black Saffiano leather bifold wallet from A.P.C. has four card slots, two note slots, a patch pocket and a flap coin compartment. It's simple and high-end all at it from Ssense for $239 (originally $265). An aerating spout for his special wines Wine aficionados know that this aerating spout is a must to truly get the most out of your wines. This spout in particular has a roomy aerating chamber and air intake system that infuses wine with just the right amount of oxygen and let it breathe. It has a tapered and ribbed rubber stopper that gives bottles a leak-free seal and a notched, slanted spout that won't drip all over the tablecloth. It can be easily taken apart and cleaned under running water. Pair this with a viewing of my new favorite show Drops of God and settle in for a perfect it from Amazon for $17.99. A chic turntable so he can enjoy his vinyl collection Help a music-loving Dad make use of old LPs with a portable turntable from Crosley. It's the perfect record player to reignite his passion for vinyl. It has Bluetooth connectivity so it can easily pair with speakers, plus adjustable pitch control, three speeds and its own full-range speaker it from Amazon for $68.95. A temp-controlled smart mug Perfect for the easily distracted dad, this temperature controlled mug keeps coffee and other hot drinks at exactly the right temp for as long as he needs. It has a long battery life and can be controlled via an app that can even send notifications. Get it from Amazon for $99.95. Indulge his love of coffee with a petite home espresso machine Upgrade your old man's morning coffee routine with this stunning espresso maker. The Breville Bambino is just what he needs to make lattes, espressos and cappuccinos. Just be warned, he'll never go back to drip coffee again once he's got this beauty in his repertoire. It's definitely pricey, but it's a great group gift from siblings or a splurge that he will enjoy for years to it from Amazon for $469.96+ (available in five colors). A perfectly nostalgic hot water bottle I find that hot water bottles are evocative of a time when you'd get tucked up in bed by your parents under handmade patchwork quilts that had been crafted with love. If your dad is of a certain age, there is a good chance he grew up using them. They're as aesthetically pleasing as they are comforting, cozy and deliciously toasty. There's a reason they've been around for hundreds of years in some iteration or another; they're a timeless way to warm yourself up. Take your pick of 10 cheerful colors with this popular hot water bottle. They're designed to hold heat for as long as possible, with a ribbed outer surface that helps maintain the inner liquid temperature while also protecting skin from it from Amazon for $9.99+. A Kindle Paperwhite e-reader If your pop is an avid reader, then a sleek, lightweight Kindle is perfect for his bookworm needs. It has an adjustable warm light, a wide display, thin border, up to 10 weeks of battery life and quick page turns. It's easy on the eyes and even waterproof. Plus, it can be paired with an Audible subscription and is it from Amazon for $149.99. Dyson Pure Cool fan This multipurpose fan and air purifier from Dyson is an absolute game-changer. I've had one for several years now and don't know how I ever managed without it. It eliminates pollutants while generating and projecting purified air into the room. The filter is easy to change, plus it removes odors and gases, has multiple strength levels and rotates. It's not cheap, but it's a really nice way to help your dad elevate the quality of the air in his home and feel comfortable at all times. Get it from Amazon for $296.95+ (available in two styles).

On 81st anniversary of D-Day, one US Navy veteran's son is the first American Pope
On 81st anniversary of D-Day, one US Navy veteran's son is the first American Pope

Fox News

time5 hours ago

  • Fox News

On 81st anniversary of D-Day, one US Navy veteran's son is the first American Pope

On this 81st anniversary of D-Day, the Pentagon has shared a powerful connection between the Vatican and the U.S. military. Pope Leo XIV's father, Louis Marius Prevost, served as a Navy officer during the historic 1944 Normandy landings. Prevost, born in Chicago in 1920, was commissioned into the Navy in November 1943. He served as the executive officer of a tank landing ship during Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied France June 6, 1944. WORLD WAR II VETERANS TRAVEL TO NORMANDY FOR EMOTIONAL D-DAY COMMEMORATION Later, he commanded an infantry landing craft in Operation Dragoon, the August 1944 Allied landing in southern the war, Prevost returned to Illinois, where he became superintendent of Brookwood School District 167 and later principal of Mount Carmel Elementary School in Chicago. He was also a catechist, teaching Christian SOX INSTALLING POPE LEO XIV GRAPHIC NEAR HIS 2005 WORLD SERIES SEAT Prevost married Mildred Agnes Martinez in 1949, and they had three sons, including Robert Francis Prevost, who was elected Pope Leo XIV May 8, 2025, becoming the first American-born this week, Pope Leo XIV signed a baseball at the Vatican, a nod to his Chicago roots and lifelong support for the White Sox. The team has honored him with a commemorative installation at Guaranteed Rate Field. The Pope's father died in 1997, but his legacy endures through his son's historic papacy and the shared values of service and HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP Fox News Digital has reached out to the Vatican for comment but has not yet received a response.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store