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On Friday morning shortly after ten o’clock – or at
10.7 a.m. to be precise – a disaster of an appalling and particularly
distressing character occurred at the Ardeer Factory of Messrs Nobel’s
Explosives Company, Limited. The incident had all the characteristics of
previous like occurrences, with the distinction that it was only on one
previous occasion exceeded in the number of victims which it claimed.
The disaster was caused through the explosion of a building in which
blasting gelatine is mixed, causing the utter demolition of the
structure and involving in the death of all the workers engaged inside
at the time of the calamity. This was followed by the immediate
detonation of a small sample magazine, where happily, no one was
employed. It is surmised that the second misadventure was occasioned by
the flying debris, and that a red-hot bolt or a large piece of hot metal
penetrated the magazine and acted as a detonator. The house in which the
original explosion took place known as Z5, is a light built structure in
dimensions 30 feet by 25 feet and 15 feet in height. Like all other
buildings in which explosives are manufactured, it was completely
isolated from every other building, placed in the centre of an area of
sand dunes, and surrounded by sand banks scientifically arranged so as
to lessen the shock of any untoward event and to give the minimum of
resistance, so as to allow any explosive gas every facility for
expanding upwards, where no very extensive damage can be done. The
factory is so arranged that the area of danger is circumscribed and it
is impossible for an explosion in one part of the works to communicate
itself to another house merely by the violent concussion which takes
place.
At The Time Of The Explosion
There were five men engaged inside the building mixing the gelatine, and
two runners in loading the manufactured gelatine on to bogies for
distribution at the cartridge huts, where the material is made up by the
girls. There are in all fourteen men attached to each house – the five
mixers, five distributive runners, and four whose duty is to bring the
raw material into the house from the "hill." According to the
regulations of the factory, which are rigidly enforced at all times, no
more than seven men are ever allowed within a mixing house at any one
time. The men inside were – G. Mansell; the senior man; J. McManus,
second man; and three mixers, W.J. Guiney, W. Kilpatrick and W.
Armstrong; while the runners – D. Begbie and H. Taggart – were
loading up. D. McLean and W. Harper were waiting outside for the signal
that Begbie and Taggart had gone before they would enter the building,
and it was just at this point that the terrible disaster took place. No
one had the faintest idea of what had happened, and in a second all that
remained of the house and its occupants was broken fragments of building
material, some scrap iron and charred wood. The effects throughout the
factory was electrical; everywhere there was the greatest consternation
and dismay; many rushed in the direction of the explosion for no
definite reason, and some were in time to see the pillar of smoke and
column of fire which accompanied the detonation of the magazine. The
violence of the shock threw everyone within its immediate scope to the
ground, or against buildings. All the buildings in the vicinity,
including the general office and the Works Manager’s house, were
severely damaged; every pane of glass within easy distance of the
demolished building being shattered, and door locks being wrenched off
as by the violent assault of a battering-ram. In some instances the
wooden huts in which the girls make the explosives into cartridges were
knocked down , and the girls have not the slightest notion as to how
they made there escape. There was no danger attached to the falling of
the huts, as they are lightly built. The scene within the factory gates
was without parallel in the history of the firm. Owing to the character
of gelatine, the report and concussion was more violent than that of a
year ago, and as the disastrous incidents of March last were still vivid
in the minds of the workers, the imagination of the girls was fired with
a sense of impending disaster, and they left their respective tasks and
fled, not knowing or caring wither. This general panic did not assist
the work of management, and the actual result of the stampede was to
spread the element of danger and to increase the toll of the injured.
Many of the terror-stricken girls rushed towards the scene of the
explosion and were struck by splinters of wood and broken stones. Others
were thrown into paroxysms of fright and had to be carried to the
ambulance room. Many of them rushed out of their huts without thought,
attired in the uniform of their work and still holding within their
nervous grasp some part of the material on which they had been engaged
at the moment of the concussion. The forewomen, all girls of experience,
kept a watchful eye on their assistants , and in many cases returned the
unfinished cartridges to the huts. Most of the girls took the shortest
route home, many of them taking a direct line to the shore and getting
to Stevenston by the circuitous route. A number of the male workers
received minor injuries, but these were quickly attended to, and the men
were able to proceed home. Only one girl received anything in the nature
of a severe injury, being struck by a heavy piece of falling debris in
the course of her flight.
Rescue Work
Immediately the ambulance section was mobilised and proceeded at once to
the scene of the calamity. On examination of the surrounding embankment,
the runners Harper and McLean were discovered mutilated but alive. Their
clothes had been blown to atoms, and they had sustained most distressing
injuries. McLean was found half buried in sand, and Harper, who, it is
supposed had been sitting on the end of the bogie at the time of the
explosion, was discovered beneath the bogie badly crushed. The violence
of the concussion turned the bogie on top of him, and this somewhat
shielded from injury from falling debris, the two injured men were
conveyed to the Western Infirmary, Glasgow, in a special train which
left Stevenston at 11.35 and reached St. Enoch’s 36 minutes later,
where it was met by an ambulance wagon which conveyed the injured to the
infirmary in the shortest possible time. Guard Hendry who was in charge
of the train, had an anxious time as he had two sons engaged in the
factory, and had no knowledge whether they had escaped or not. The
condition of McLean was the more precarious, and late in the evening
news reached the town that he had succumbed to his injuries. His mate
Harper rallied with remarkable vigour, and is likely to be wholly
restored to his wonted activity.
Searching For The Victims
As soon as it was known that only two of the men immediately concerned
had escaped with their lives, the task of searching for the fragmentary
remains of the victims was commenced. A considerable body of men were
detailed to perform this gruesome task, and in accordance eith the
requirement of the Home Office, whenever any human remains were
discovered, the searcher placed a wooden stake in the ground to mark the
spot so that it could be removed by the proper authority. Nothing was
found which could be identified with any particular person, although the
aggregate quantity of human remains was greater than on any similar
occasion.
Official Report - The
following official statement was issued by the Company:
Shortly after ten o’clock a building in which blasting explosives are
mixed exploded, and communicated itself immediately to a small magazine
in which there were no workers. The buildings were completely wrecked,
and a good deal of structural damage was done to other buildings
throughout the factory. Five men were employed in the gelatine house,
and it is much to be regretted that these men have lost their lives. In
addition to these men there were two service runners, who were taking
material from the magazine house. They also lost their lives, and two
more runners were also injured, and were conveyed by special train to
Glasgow Western Infirmary, where one has since succumbed to his injuries
and shock. At present it is impossible to say what caused the accident.
The names of those killed and injured are as follows:-
G. Mansell, chargeman, married, Burnbank Street, Stevenston.
J. McManus, married, pan mixer, Glebe Street, Saltcoats.
W.J. Guiney, married, pan mixer, Limekiln Road, Stevenston.
W. Kilpatrick, married, pan mixer, Townhead, Stevenston.
W. Armstrong, single, pan mixer, Breakplough, Stevenston.
D. Begbie, single, service runner, Parkend Road, Saltcoats.
H. Taggart, married, service runner, Limekiln Road, Stevenston.
D. McLean, service runner, Manse Street, Saltcoats. (died in hospital)
Injured – W. Harper, runner, Gladstone Road, Saltcoats.
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Funerals of the victims – Two impressive ceremonies
It was arranged that the funerals for the eight men who lost their
in the explosion on Friday should take place on Tuesday afternoon, and
in consequence the factory was closed all that day. There were two
ceremonies, the first in connection the interment of the seven men who
were instantaneously killed, and the second in connection with that of
the young man who died as the result of his injuries. As on the former
occasion the arrangements of the first funeral were carried out by the
management of the factory, and everything was done in a reverent and
orderly manner. All that remained of G. Mansell, J. McManus, W.J.
Guiney, W. Kilpatrick, W. Armstrong, D. Begbie and H. Taggart was placed
in a single oak coffin, and conveyed to the hall above the general
office pending the funeral service. Before one o’clock the workers
commenced arriving at the factory, and lined up outside the main gate.
All the trains which arrived in Stevenston were packed with people
interested in seeing the funeral procession, or friends and fellow
workers of the departed come to pay their last tribute to their memory.
The day was the brightest that has been experienced for months, and the
silent but pervading message of life and hope, which the first Spring
day brings to all of us after the bleakness of the winter months, was a
striking contrast to the sad and sombre atmosphere which hung like a
pall over the spirits of the district which was so intimately touched by
the tragedy. The relatives of the deceased men were conveyed by coaches
to the General Offices, where suitable provision had been made for the
service being held. Inside the building the seats were arranged in two
sections. On a table stood the coffin, and beside it were the floral
tributes. The bedecked coffin and table were eloquent of the high regard
in which these men were held, and the very wide field of contributors
was testimony to their many-sided lives and extensive interests. On a
raised platform were seated the officiating clergymen, and facing the
coffin were arranged in sombre rows the relations of the departed. To
the right of the coffin places were found for staff. Sir Frederio and
Lady Nathan were present, and her ladyship, by her kind and gracious
manner in going round the bereaved ones, imparted some measure of
sympathy and support to their over-charged hearts. Mr D. B. Milne and Mr
Rodger represented the head office of the Company , and all the members
of the Ardeer Staff were present. Captain Campbell, D.S.O., Member for
the Constituency, as on a former occasion, travelled down from London
specially to be present at the funeral.
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The Rev. A. Gillespie opened the service with the
invocation, Rev. R. J. Kyd gave the Old Testament reading, and in a
brief prayer spoke words of comfort and consolation : Rev. D. D. Rees
read the New Testament lesson ; Rev. A. Morris Moodie offered up prayer
; and the benediction was pronounced by the Rev. Matthew Miller. The
cermony was exceedingly impressive, and those present were deeply
effected . Proceeding outside the relatives entered the waiting coaches,
and the funeral cortege wended its way to the cemetery. The procession
was headed by the pipe band of the 5th Royal Scots Fusilers,
who played the doleful strains of "Lovat’s Lament." Then
followed the body of the Ardeer section of the Fusiliers, their red
tunics being in acute contradistinction to their drab surroundings. The
Territorials were followed by the members of the Shepherds’ Society in
checked plaid and tam-o’-shanter, and then came the Gardeners,
Rechabites, Templars and Orangemen, each with the distinctive regalia of
their order. The workers in the Gelatine Department, both male and
female immediately preceded the hearse and then came the coaches of the
relatives, the factory staff, and in the rear the Union Officials, the
members of local public bodies, and the general body of workers. All
along the streets were lined with grief-stricken spectators. All the
blinds in the town were drawn, and all the shops were closed in token of
respect, and as the sad procession wended its way through the town there
were many who gave manifestation of being deeply touched by the spectle.
The funeral procession was the longest that has been seen in the town,
and took twelve minutes to pass a given point. As it neared the cemetery
the advance section lined up outside the gate, ??? Territorials forming
a cordon along the street. Filing along the cemetery walls to the place
of interment, the procession passed the spot where last year’s victims
were buried. A fitting memorial has been erected by the Company over the
grave of those heroes in the industrial field. Round the open grave the
relatives assembled, and there some pathetic scenes were witnessed. The
full significance of the occurrence seemed to present itself to the
minds of some of those present in the spectacle of the grave. The
committal ceremony was conducted by the Rev. Alexander Copland, Rector
of St Andrew’s Episcopal Church.
A very large proportion of the workers proceeded to
Saltcoats immediately thereafter to be present at the funeral of the
young man McLean, who was being buried from his parents’ house in
Manse Street, Saltcoats. The funeral service was there conducted by Rev.
D.D. Rees. Similar manifestations of sorrow were evident in Saltcoats as
had characterised the funeral in Stevenston. Manse Street to Ardrossan
Road was lined on both sides spectators, and as the procession moved
along the crowd showed its respect by bowed and uncovered heads. A great
number of wreaths had been sent in from sympathisers, and these followed
the hearse in an open carriage. The Friendly Societies and the fellow
workers of the deceased were also present, and the silent cortege was an
effected sight. The remains of the young man were interred at Ardrossan
Cemetery.
Effect On Stevenston
The entire township of Stevenston was strung up to a high pitch of
nervous excitement by the deafening report which accompanied the
explosion on Friday, and immediately houses were deserted and the
streets throng with anxious and apprehensive men and women. There is not
a home in Stevenston which is not in some way connected with the great
explosives industry, and consequently the first vibration of an
explosion carries a painful significance to every house in the town. The
minute or thereby that elapsed between the first and second explosion
was sufficient to fill the streets, and as all eyes were turned in the
direction of the factory the effect of the second explosion was
witnessed by a large number of people. In describing this effect an
eyewitness said that it resembled a gigantic firework display, in which
balls of fire burst into myriad-coloured flames. The most brilliant
pyrotechnic exhibition conducted in the darkness of night could not be
compared with the effect created by the daylight fireworks of the
magazine explosion. Almost instantaneously the concussion shook every
building in Stevenston to its foundation. Windows and doors rattled, and
in many cases the glass was unable to withstand the shock. At the
Buttercup Company’s premises and at the Cooperative Store
The plate glass windows were blown into the shops. So
terrific was the violence of the explosion that throughout the town
people engaged inside workshops and houses had a feeling that the
building was going to fall about their ears. When the first shock of the
explosion had passed, and the people realised the possibilities of the
incident, there was at once a general movement in the direction of the
factory gate. In a very short time the Dynamite Road was thronged with
relatives of workers eager to know the fate of their friends. The
wildest rumours were current, but nothing definite was known. In order
to allay ungrounded fears, work was entirely suspended in all
departments, so that the employees could carry the message of their
personal safety to their anxious kinfolk. By the time the first group of
employees had gained the outer gate the seat of the disaster was made
known, and the news travelled round with remarkable rapidity, carrying a
feeling of security to the majority, but increasing the fears of those
who knew their friends were engaged in that particular section of the
work. As soon as the facts were known, an official statement of the
killed and injured was posted by the management , and the worst was soon
told in the town.
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