The January/February issue of HERITAGE QUEST, page 44 has an article on the Chatsworth, Livingston Co., IL Train Wreck, midnight, August10-11, 1887. If you do not subscribe to this magazine, you may find it at a bookstore. I bought mine at Barnes & Noble in Atlanta, GA. The article does not tell anything new or different about one of the worst wrecks in American rail history, but it does list the names of the dead and injured (also place of residence of these passengers) which was published in The Pan-Handler Advocate, August 12, 1887; reprinted in Piper City (IL) Journal, August 28, 1969. "There were probably more dead or wounded not listed as it was difficult for anyone to keep an accurate record." The people of Chatsworth and Piper City, IL and nearby farmers opened their homes to the wounded and grieving. "The dead were extracted from the wreckage with some being identified." To jog your memory, this was an excursion train, two engines and 20 wooden coaches, from Peoria to Niagara Falls, carrying approximate 500 passengers that struck a burning culvert in a season of weeks of dry hot weather. Susan Ulfers Campbell (Fairbury, IL & Atlanta, GA)