Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

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John Ashworth
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Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

Post by John Ashworth »

Superintendent Charles Ryall was waiting in 1st class coach no 12 in 1900 to try and shoot a man-eating lion which had been attacking railway construction workers. It seems he drifted off to sleep. The lion came in through a window (see how small they are!), reportedly stood on a sleeping colleague without harming him, and dragged Ryall out of the window, killing him.

Photos by John Ashworth 1st March 2008
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1st class coach no 12, constructed in 1899
1st class coach no 12, constructed in 1899
1st class coach no 12
1st class coach no 12
Interior 1
Interior 1
Interior 2
Interior 2
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John Ashworth
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Re: Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

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Photos of the same coaches stabled in a slightly different order taken by John Ashworth in 1996
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In the shed
In the shed
094.jpg (32.22 KiB) Viewed 2719 times
In the foreground is a narrow gauge trolley in which Europeans were pushed around Mombasa in the early days
In the foreground is a narrow gauge trolley in which Europeans were pushed around Mombasa in the early days
095.jpg (45.23 KiB) Viewed 2685 times
3rd class coach
3rd class coach
Coach no 12
Coach no 12
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Kevin Wilson-Smith

Re: Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

Post by Kevin Wilson-Smith »

What we were talking about! Thank you!!!!!
Kevin Wilson-Smith

Re: Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

Post by Kevin Wilson-Smith »

he coaches were based on an Indian design - hence the shutters and small windows - designed to deal with a hot environment.

It is amazing that a lion could get through a window that size, let alone drag Ryall out of the window. The other individual in the coach was an Italian called Parenti.

The story is well documented - see "The Lions of Tsavo" by Patterson, or the "Lunatic Express" by C Miller.

The UR (for those who may wonder) stands for Uganda Railways, which is what it was called then.
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John Ashworth
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Re: Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

Post by John Ashworth »

Sudanese coaches also have those sun shade blinds over the windows.
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Kevin Wilson-Smith

Re: Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

Post by Kevin Wilson-Smith »

Have you travelled in them? DO they work?
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John Ashworth
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Re: Nairobi Railway Museum - lion attack

Post by John Ashworth »

Never travelled on Sudan Railways, sadly. I don't know if the sun shades work.
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