60 years since the Great Train Robbery
On August 8, 1963 a gang of at least 12 men robbed a Royal Mail train packed with money heading from Glasgow to London on the West Coast Main Line.
The robbery consisted of 125 sacks of banknotes worth 2.6 million pounds ($7.3 million at the time). What followed was a story of prison escapes and fugitives. It was dubbed the Great Train Robbery and became known as "the heist of the century", spawning books and TV shows.
The following text is from The Associated Press article, "Masked Bandits Pull a $2.8 Million Train Robbery in England; Rated Biggest Haul", printed in the Hope (Ark.) Star, Thursday, August 8, 1963.
Cheddington, England (AP) - A band of 20 to 30 masked bandits decoyed the Glasgow-London mail train to a halt with a false signal today, blackjacked the engineer and escaped with loot that the post office said may exceed a million pounds ($2.8 million).
Executed in 15 minutes, this was the biggest and boldest train robbery in British history. Of comparable robberies in the United States, the biggest cash haul was $1,551,277 taken last Aug. 14 from a mail truck outside Plymouth, Mass.
"The loss is likely to be very heavy and may well run into seven figures," the British Post Office said. "This is the first attack on a traveling post office in the 125 years of their history."
Postmaster General Reginald Bevins promptly ordered a £10,000 ($28,000) reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the bandits.
The bandits seized about 120 bags of registered mail containing a large quantity of used but still valid currency which was being returned to London for reprocessing. There were reports the haul also included a consignment of diamonds for Hatton Market, London's gem trading center.
The bandits struck shortly after 3am at a rural crossing 40 miles northwest of London. They covered the green signal at the crossing with a glove and put batteries behind the red signal to light it. They also cut railway telephone wires.
Garbed in coveralls and various types of masks, the band boarded the train with clubs and iron bars as weapons when engineer Jack Mills, 58, halted his diesel engine. Mills was clubbed down.
Some smashed windows of the first two mail coaches and climbed aboard. They bound the four mail sorters. They handcuffed the assistant engineer, David Whitby, to Mills, uncoupled the two coaches from the remaining 10 cars of the train and forced the engineer to move the engine and two cars a mile farther south.
Whitby said later he was told by one of the bandits: "If you shout, I will kill you." The band unloaded the mail bags on a bridge over a narrow country road and dropped them to cars waiting on the road 15 feet below. Then they sped away. "It was obviously a very professional job," said detective Supt. Malcolm Fewtrell of Buckinghamshire. "They seemed to know their railway signaling."
The mail train carried no passengers. About 50 postal workers were aboard.
Text Excerpts
The Associated Press article, "Masked Bandits Pull a $2.8 Million Train Robbery in England; Rated Biggest Haul", printed in The Hope (Ark.) Star, Thursday, August 8, 1963.
Text and photo curation by Kathryn Bubien