Driver Killed in Bedford Train Crash Named; Family Pays Tribute
Quick Look
- Shaun Burton, 60, an East Midlands Railway driver, has been identified as the sole fatality in a train collision near Bedford.
- The crash injured 100 people.
- His family and union have paid tribute to him.
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Why It Matters
A train crash occurred on Friday afternoon on the line between Bedford and Luton, resulting in one fatality and 100 injuries. Investigations into the cause are ongoing.
Police have named the driver killed in the Bedford train crash on Friday, as his family paid tribute to him.
British Transport police said Shaun Burton, 60, was the East Midlands Railway driver killed in the collision on the line between Bedford and Luton that also left 100 people injured.
Two trains collided on the commuter line on Friday afternoon.
In a statement released by Burton’s family on Sunday, they said: “We are devastated by his loss. Our thoughts are also with those affected by this incident.”
ASLEF, the train drivers’ union, also paid tribute to Burton. General secretary Dave Calfe described him as “dedicated to the job, and devoted to his colleagues and enormously popular at his depot”.
He went on: “Shaun, a driver at East Midlands Railway, joined the railway relatively late in life. He loved public transport – he used to work on buses and coaches – before he became a train driver seven years ago … The railway family grieves his passing; no one should go off to work in the morning and not come home. Our thoughts are with his family and friends tonight.”
Earlier on Sunday, Network Rail said that it expected major disruption on the rail line to continue for at least a week.
In a statement setting out the effects on some services until 28 June, the rail body said the disaster had been a “tragic, isolated incident”.
Engineers are working to remove the track’s overhead electrical wires and construct a temporary access road to the crash site.
This will enable two 110-tonne cranes to be used to lift the damaged trains and carriages on to trailers to remove them by road, allowing engineers to assess any damage to the track and complete the necessary repairs.
The line between Bedford and Luton will remain closed for the rest of the week as a result, with a limited rail replacement bus service in operation instead. There will be no services between Bedford and London St Pancras station.
A limited service will begin to run north from St Pancras as far as Luton from Monday, but there will be no services north of Luton on the busy commuter Thameslink line. Luton airport express services have been cancelled and a rail replacement bus will operate between Luton airport and Luton.
Investigations into the crash are continuing, but the managing director of Network Rail’s eastern region, Ellie Burrows, said “current indications are that this was a tragic isolated incident”.
She said work to remove the two East Midlands Railway (EMR) trains from the track was being carried out at pace.
“This is a complex and challenging task and our teams will be working tirelessly to reopen the railway so we can resume services between Bedford and London,” she said.
Passengers should “expect disruption to services through this area for the majority of next week and only travel if absolutely necessary”.
More than 80 passengers were treated in hospital on Friday night. As of Saturday morning, 28 were still in hospital, nine of them in a critical condition.
The Rail Accident Investigation Branch (RAIB) said on Saturday that its inspectors were continuing to gather evidence at the scene, which is just south of the Elstow interchange between the A421 and the A6.
“RAIB will conduct a full, independent safety investigation into this tragic accident,” the agency said in a post on X. “We will provide a further update in the coming days once we know more.”
Specialist investigators from British Transport Police are working with RAIB’s inspectors to determine what happened, and members of the public have been urged to refrain from speculation.
The trains involved were the 4.40pm Friday service from Corby to St Pancras and the 3.50pm departure from Nottingham to the same destination.
The front of the Corby train was crushed when it crashed into the rear of the Nottingham train, and it also sustained damage to its rear carriages when they were shunted into the ones in front.
The chief constable of British Transport Police, Lucy D’Orsi, said people in Bedfordshire had shown “immense kindness to those stranded on trains and casualties”.
One person from Elstow, who did not wish to be named, said a friend’s son had had a full view of the crash site from his home. “There was loads of people throwing out water and food over the fence. They did everything they could to try and help those people,” she said.
Network Rail said that while the Midland mainline was closed at Bedford, train operators would accept tickets for affected EMR customers on any alternative route. If customers decide to travel on EMR once the line is reopened, their connecting ticket on other operators will be valid on that day too.
Open Questions
- What caused the collision?
- What is the full extent of the damage to the track?
- When will full services be restored?






