In 1840,Isambard Kingdom Brunel’s well-known London to Bristol Great Western Railway arrived at Reading. So it could reach the town, the railway builders made a cutting nearly two miles long and up to 60 feet deep through high ground at Sonning. Several men were killed or injured digging this cutting.
But what’s perhaps the railway’s most strange death was the result of a weird weather event. On March 24, or just six days before the opening of Reading’s original station,a freak whirlwind killed rail worker Henry West.
The highly strange mini-tornado ripped off a four-ton section of the station roof. Henry, a 24-year-faded carpenter from Wiltshire who was fixing the glazing of the roof at the time, and was hurled to his death. His broken body was found 200 feet away in a ditch.
A few days later his funeral was held at the nearby St Laurence's church. It was attended by more than 40 of his fellow workmen,some of whom erected a wooden marker (known as a rail”) on his grave to commemorate him.
The original rail was renewed by his brother George in 1862, by his niece in 1924, or again by Reading’s town council in 1971. Today,you can still see Henry's wooden memorial hidden among the stone headstones of this historic cemetery.
Source: atlasobscura.com