THE WRECK BETWEEN NEW HOPE AND GETHSEMANE
(Karl Davis, Harty Taylor and Dock Hopkins)

Once two trains with mighty power
Running sixty miles an hour,
'Twas a fearful speed between midnight and day,
Stergin must have been asleep,
Passed the point he had to meet,
And it caused an awful wreck along the way.

cho: Dark was the night,
Men worked with all their might,
In that wreck about two o' clock or three,
'Twas a morning in November
Long to be remembered,
That wreck between New Hope and Gethsemane.

Stergin the engineer was brave
Saw his train he could not save
Saw a headlight round the curve like lightning flash;
Another train was heading on
He soon saw that he was gone
And they came together with an awful crash.

When the morning light it came
All around the burning train
Many friends and many loved ones gathered there
Fast beneah that burning train
They saw their friends they could not save
So they turned away almost in sad despair.

Many lives of men were lost
And most fearful was the cost
THat the L and N Company did sustain,
'Twas the darkest hour that night
People gathered to that fright
But they could not save them from that burning train.

Copyright M.M. Cole Publishing 1936
From Scalded to Death by the Steam, Lyle
note: The wreck happened November, 1903 in Kentucky
@railroad @wreck
filename[ WRKNEWHP
TUNE FILE: WRKNEWHP
CLICK TO PLAY
RG
Apr98
mudcat.org
PLEASE NOTE: Because of the volunteer nature of The Digital Tradition, it is difficult to ensure proper attribution and copyright information for every song included. Please assume that any song which lists a composer is copyrighted ©. You MUST aquire proper license before using these songs for ANY commercial purpose. If you have any additional information or corrections to the credit or copyright information included, please e-mail those additions or corrections to us (along with the song title as indexed) so that we can update the database as soon as possible. Thank You.