advertisement

Wreath recalls Naperville train crash's 70th anniversary

It was 70 years ago when two trains collided on what's now known as the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad line in the then-small town of Naperville, killing 45 people.

The crash, though tragic, faded a bit from Naperville's collective memory until a sculpture dedicated two years ago by the public art nonprofit Century Walk Corp. brought it back to the forefront.

At 1 p.m. Monday, the anniversary of the crash, a handful of people gathered at the sculpture to reflect.

"I visit the crash site just about every April 25," said Naperville resident Jim Christen, a member of a committee that commissioned the 2014 sculpture by Naperville artist Paul Kuhn. "There seems to be people there all the time."

Christen, 81, visits the site because the crash always has intrigued him. As an 11-year-old in St. Louis, he saw a newspaper story about a crash along the same train line he and his family would take to Chicago. He clipped the story and built onto it with years of research, which eventually became "raw material" for author Chuck Spinner's 2012 book "The Tragedy at the Loomis Street Crossing."

The book tells the stories of the people who died, and the sculpture, called "Tragedy to Triumph," remembers the injured and deceased as well as those who came to their aid.

Sculpture committee members decided to lay a wreath at the sculpture Monday in honor of the crash's anniversary. While they gathered in the afternoon, Christen said they placed the wreath by the sculpture early in the morning so commuters could see it.

1946 train crash to be memorialized in Naperville sculpture

Naperville turns train wreck tragedy to 'Triumph' with sculpture

  Artist Paul Kuhn speaks with Sandy Youngstrom of Naperville as a small group of people gather Monday afternoon at the site of a 1946 train wreck in Naperville that killed 45 people. A sculpture Kuhn built of railroad spikes and train wheels was dedicated two years ago to mark the spot. Mark Black/mblack@dailyherald.com
  A plaque and sculpture honor the victims and rescuers of a 1946 train wreck along what's now called the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad in Naperville. A small group of residents marked the crash's 70th anniversary Monday afternoon by gathering and laying a wreath. Mark Black/mblack@dailyherald.com
When two trains collided on April 25, 1956, along what's now known as the Burlington Northern Santa Fe railroad in Naperville, 45 people died and many came to the aid of the survivors. The crash site now is marked with a 2014 sculpture called "Tragedy to Triumph" and was decorated with flowers Monday on the 70th anniversary of the crash. Courtesy of Chuck Spinner
Article Comments
Guidelines: Keep it civil and on topic; no profanity, vulgarity, slurs or personal attacks. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked. If a comment violates these standards or our terms of service, click the "flag" link in the lower-right corner of the comment box. To find our more, read our FAQ.