This has just jogged my memory, because I can recall that Boxing Day 1962, when we were visiting from Somerset to The Wirral, not too far across Cheshire from Coppenhall, and after a very deep frozen sub-zero Christmas Day, substantial snow started to fall after Boxing Day lunch, and continued for some days. I remember going out by tea time to measure it. It would be surprising if there was no snowfall at all over by Winsford, impacting visibility, or even impacting the recovery, yet the Report (linked above) does not mention it. It states it was cold, but gives no other information or measurement.It was of course at the start of the severe winter of 1962/3, and happened on Boxing Day 1962.
I find reference to curves a bit surprising because my recollection of that stretch is it is dead straight, with commonly two signals ahead visible. Here's the view up and down the line from the Nantwich Road overbridge at about the collision point https://www.google.com/maps/@53.156...=59.43095&pitch=0&thumbfov=100!7i13312!8i6656
You get the impression that the Inspector's report is based almost wholly just on some interviews done after the event, and some rather arch conclusions drawn. There is no comment on a Glasgow driver being as far south as Crewe, and what a long and fatiguing journey in poor conditions it would have been.
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