As I thought the subject was a little bit morbid that I would put it here and let the moderators decide if it can be moved to a more public area......
http://www.railwayaccidents.port.ac.uk/what-were-doing/The Railway Work, Life and Death project is trying to improve our knowledge and understanding of British and Irish railway worker accidents from the later 19th century to the start of the Second World War. We want to unlock the mass of details – some minor, some startling, all significant – contained in a variety of sources, and show how valuable they can be as a means of accessing the experience of working on the railways.
Allied to that is this
https://www.railwaymuseum.org.uk/objects-and-stories/caution-railway-safety-1913By 1913, worker deaths and injuries had increased to over 30,000 in a single year. Growing pressure from trades unions and the threat of new laws forced the railway companies to act. The Great Western Railway’s management introduced the Safety Movement in August 1913.
It was a radical departure, using photographs and a conversational tone to grab the reader's attention and show them what to do. This accessible style soon spread throughout the railway industry, and has been used ever since. Safety education tried to change behaviour—but at times it also implied that the worker was to blame.
Alongside safety education, the older formal methods of rules and signs continued. Some workers used personal protective equipment, and government inspectors investigated a few worker deaths and injuries and recommended changes. Despite all this, many workers were killed, or disabled for life, with a huge impact on their families.