Victoria Hall stampede
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Victoria Hall disaster | |
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Victoria Hall Disaster Memorial in Mowbray Park
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Victoria Hall disaster shown within Tyne and Wear
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File:Victoria hall disaster.jpg
Poster advertising the variety show at which the children died
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Time | 3pm |
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Date | 16 June 1883 |
Location | Victoria Hall, Sunderland |
Type | Stampede, crushed to death |
Summary: 183 children, aged between 3 and 14, were crushed to death in a stampede for the stage when free toys were offered. The disaster is the worst of its kind in British history. |
The Victoria Hall disaster, in which 183 children died, occurred in Sunderland, England on 16 June 1883 at the Victoria Hall, which was a large concert hall on Toward Road facing onto Mowbray Park.
Contents
Events
On 16 June 1883, a children's variety show was presented by travelling entertainers Mr. and Mrs. Fay.[1][2]
At the end of the show, an announcement was made that children with certain numbered tickets would be presented with a prize upon exit. At the same time entertainers began distributing gifts from the stage to the children in the stalls. Worried about missing out on the treats, many of the estimated 1,100 children in the gallery stampeded toward the staircase leading downstairs.[3] At the bottom of the staircase, the door had been opened inward and bolted in such a way as to leave a gap only wide enough for one child to pass at a time. It is believed this was to ensure orderly checking of tickets.[4] With few accompanying adults to maintain order, the children surged down the stairs toward the door. Those at the front became trapped and were crushed to death by the weight of the crowd behind them.[2]
When the adults in the auditorium realised what was happening they rushed to the door, but they could not open the door fully as the bolt was on the children's side. Caretaker Frederick Graham ran up another staircase and diverted approximately 600 children to safety.[1] Meanwhile, the other adults pulled the children one by one through the narrow gap, before one man pulled the door from its hinges.[1]
In his 1894 account of the incident, survivor William Codling, Jr., described the crush and the realisation that people were dying:
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Soon we were most uncomfortably packed but still going down. Suddenly I felt that I was treading upon someone lying on the stairs and I cried in horror to those behind "Keep back, keep back! There's someone down." It was no use, I passed slowly over and onwards with the mass and before long I passed over others without emotion.
— William Codling, Jr.[5]
Aftermath
With the compressive asphyxia of 183 children between 3 and 14 years old, the disaster is the worst of its kind in British history.[4][6] Queen Victoria sent a message of condolence to the grieving families. Donations sent from all over Britain totalled £5,000 and were used for the children's funerals and a memorial in Mowbray Park. The memorial, of a grieving mother holding a dead child, was later moved to Bishopwearmouth Cemetery where it gradually fell into disrepair and was vandalised. In 2002, the marble statue was restored at a cost of £63,000 and moved back to Mowbray Park with a protective canopy.[2][7]
The disaster inspired a poem by Scottish poet William McGonagall entitled The Sunderland Calamity."[8]
Newspaper reports at the time triggered a mood of national outrage and the resulting inquiry led to legislation that public entertainment venues be fitted with a minimum number of outward opening emergency exits,[2] which led to the invention of 'push bar' emergency doors.[citation needed] This law still remains in full force as of 2016.[2] No one was prosecuted for the disaster,[2] and the person responsible for bolting the door was never identified. The Victoria Hall remained in use until 1941 when it was destroyed by a World War II parachute bomb.[2][9]
See also
References
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