History Daily - The First Passenger Train Through the Channel Tunnel
Episode Date: November 14, 2025November 14, 1994. The first Channel Tunnel passenger train departs London and arrives in Paris less than three hours later. This episode originally aired in 2024. Support the show! Join Into Histor...y for ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's just afternoon on December 1, 1990, in a tunnel deep beneath the English Channel.
42-year-old British engineer Graham Fagg pushes a heavy jackhammer into the rock face at the end of the tunnel and chips away at the wall piece by piece.
Three years ago, Britain and France began work on a collaborative project unlike any before.
Skilled engineers on either side of the English Channel began tunneling down, digging below the seabed.
After months of gradual progress, the British side has excavated a tunnel 13 miles in length,
and now they're closing in on the French team digging in the other direction.
Graham's drill cuts into the rock again and a large chunk crumbles away.
But as the dust clears, though, Graham realizes there's an opening in the rock face.
He's broken through.
Tears drift through from the French tunnel on the other side of the wall.
Graham sticks his arm into the gap where it's immediately grabbed by.
a French tunnel. In the excitement, the Frenchman pushes the upper half of his body through the
hole and waves to the British engineers. Cameras flash as the journalists who gathered to
capture this historic event take photos. Then Graham urges the Frenchman back into his half of the tunnel.
When he's safely out of the way, Graham picks his jackhammer back up and begins making the gap larger.
Soon enough, it's big enough to walk through. Then Graham puts down his drill and cameras flash
again as he becomes the first person to walk from the British Isles to mainland Europe since the
end of the ice age. The joining of the British and French sections of the Channel Tunnel
is the culmination of years of planning and construction. But the engineer's task is far from over.
Their eventual goal is to build a railroad that will allow people to travel between Britain and
France and another four years of hard work will lie ahead before passenger service beneath the sea
finally begins on November 14, 1994.
From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people
and events that shaped our world. Today is November 14th, 1994, the first passenger train
through the Channel Tunnel. It's January 20th, 1986, in a hotel in Beijing, China,
almost five years before British and French tunlars meet below the English Channel.
Scottish engineer Gordon Crichton picks up the small electric kettle he always travels with
and pours hot water into a cup. Then he stretches and yawns.
Ever since he arrived in China to oversee the construction of a new subway, Gordon has struggled
with jet lag, and today's no different. He's woken up early, so Gordon switches on the television
and flips to the news channel while he waits for his tea to brew. As he gets dressed, a familiar
your voice on the TV catches his attention. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher is standing at a
podium alongside French President Francois Mitterrand. With a rush of excitement, Gordon realizes that they're
about to announce the winning bid for a major new construction project. Since the beginning of the
19th century, innovators and engineers have fantasized about the possibility of linking Britain and France
by road or rail. In 1881, two businessmen even began digging a tunnel, but the project soon fell apart,
when neither government offered financial backing.
For centuries, Britain and France had regularly been at war,
and many believed that a physical link between the two
would be disastrous for the security of both nations.
But in the 20th century, the relationship between Britain and France
became more harmonious, and the idea of a cross-channel transport link was resurrected.
Last year, Prime Minister Thatcher and President Mitterrand
invited several companies to submit designs.
These were narrowed down to four proposals, an enormous suspension bridge,
a series of bridges and tunnels between artificial islands, a road tunnel and a rail tunnel.
Eager to hear the news of who won the bid, Gordon settles down in front of the television,
having forgotten his cup of tea.
His company specializes in building subway systems and is part of the rail tunnel bid.
And as he watches, Prime Minister Thatcher announces that their submission is the winner.
Gordon settles back in his seat laughing to himself.
He's glad he's already working on the Chinese some way,
because building the channel tunnel won't be easy.
Even at its narrowest point, the English Channel is still 21 miles wide.
Construction is expected to take at least seven years,
and since nothing has been attempted on this scale before,
there's a high chance of failure.
So Gordon pities the colleague who will be chosen to lead the tunneling.
But Gordon's engineering and management skills are too good for his company
to leave in China.
Nine months later, he gets a call making him the director of engineering of the channel tunnel
and placing Gordon responsible for excavations on both sides to the channel.
In a series of meetings in London and Paris, Gordon outlines the construction schedule to his team.
On the English side, the rock is drier, more pliable and easier to cut through.
And for this reason, the British team is given a responsibility for boring through 13 miles of tunnel.
The French will have to dig only 10 miles, but through tunnel.
tougher geology. Then, after the distances are agreed upon, the two countries' digging teams must
decide on a meeting point. If the tunnels miss each other, correcting the mistake would be costly.
But accurately digging to one spot underneath the English channel is going to be difficult.
Satellite mapping is ineffective under so much water. So instead, the British and French crews
both use laser targeting to direct their tunneling machinery. But even that machinery presents
a problem. There's no equipment on the market that can excavate a tunnel underneath the English
channel at the speed required to complete the job by deadline. And British and French companies
can't make the equipment to the right specifications at the right budget. So Gordon commissions a Japanese
company to build 11 boring machines that can cut a tunnel, collect the loose rock, and transport it to the
surface using conveyor belts. By the time preparations are complete, equipment is ready,
and excavation begins at the end of 1987, the clock
is already ticking. Gordon's deadline to complete the work is May 1993. That gives him just five and a
half years to complete one of the largest tunneling operations the world has ever seen. As work begins,
Gordon makes sure his team is aware of how difficult this undertaking will be. Everything that can go
wrong probably will. But Gordon will be proven right sooner than he knows, because the boring
machines won't get more than a few hundred yards from shore before water begins pouring in and work
on the Channel Tunnel comes to a sudden stop. It's February 1988 in the English section of
the Channel Tunnel, a few weeks after digging work began. Engineering Director Gordon Crichton
stares at water dripping from the roof of the tunnel. At his side is another engineer, Helen
Mattress. Both of them are up to their ankles in water. This is the first real test of the
Channel Tunnel project. Earlier today, construction ground to a halt as workers discovered water
pouring in through the roof.
Every day that digging stops
add roughly $2 million to the budget,
so the leak must be fixed quickly.
But Gordon is perplexed as to where the water's coming from.
They're 300 feet below the seabed,
and there are two geological layers of rock above their heads
that should be impervious to the water of the English Channel.
Gordon's years of experience tells him
that there shouldn't be any way that seawater can leak into the tunnel,
but somehow his feet are still soaking wet.
Gordon sighs and heads away from the rock face.
He needs to report the work stoppage to the government minister overseeing the project.
But he's only splashed a few feet down the tunnel when Helen shouts for him to stop.
Gordon turns around to see her crouching in the water with a broad grin on her face.
She tells Gordon to taste it.
Gordon's confused.
He's not sure what point Helen's trying to make.
But he's worked with Helen for years and trusts her.
So he bends over, takes a scoop of water, and lifts it to his mouth.
Gordon smiles as well when he tastes it, too.
It isn't salty, and that means it can't be coming from the English Channel.
Instead, it's freshwater, filtered through the rock,
rain from hundreds of thousands of years ago when the English Channel didn't even exist.
Gordon sets off back down the tunnel, but now he's got a different phone call to make.
Since it's not water from the English Channel seeping in,
they should be able to simply fill the cracks in the roof.
That'll plug the leaks and allow tunneling to continue.
so he orders a chemical resin to be injected into the rock fissures as well as pumps to remove
the standing water from the tunnel floor.
And within a few weeks, the tunnel is dry and digging can begin again.
But now Gordon faces a race to get the project back on schedule.
His company offers bonus payments to work crews that meet distance targets.
The tunnelers welcome the extra pay, but some believe that speed is being prioritized over safety.
Those fears are given extra weight when a 19-year-old worker died.
in an accident. Reports suggest that Andrew McKenna missed the underground train that carried his
work crew to the tunnel face, so he started walking down the track to catch up, but he was then
trapped when trains approached him in both directions at the same time. Andrew is the first fatality
during construction of the channel tunnel, but he's not the last. One British worker dies when a
tunnel boring machine starts up unexpectedly. Another is killed by heavy lifting equipment,
and yet another is electrocuted when fixing a cable.
In total, 10 people are killed during the excavation of the tunnel.
But three years after work first begin, there is finally cause for celebration.
The British and French tunnels meet 132 feet below the English Channel,
and British tunneller Graham Fag shakes hands with his French counterpart, Philippe Cosette.
And thanks to the laser-guided boring machines,
the two tunnels are only a few inches off target when they meet.
celebrations take place on both sides of the tunnel.
The British have a buffet of sandwiches, but the French have come better prepared.
They offer their British counterparts hot food and champagne.
And after the ceremonies are complete,
the British engineers hitch a ride on the French tunnelers train
and get their passport stamped when they arrive in Calais,
the first British visitors to travel to France by land in recorded history.
Gordon Crichton knows that the joining of the tunnels is a historic moment.
but the job isn't finished yet.
The project won't be complete until three tunnels have been dug beneath the sea,
two for trains, with a service tunnel in between them.
So the excavations will continue for another three years.
After that, tracks will be laid, the rails will be electrified,
and ventilation shafts dug.
Only then, more than 18 months behind schedule,
will the channel tunnel be ready for its first paying customers,
and a new era in European travel will finally begin.
It's November 14, 1994 at Waterloo Station, London, four years after British and French
tunellers met beneath the English Channel.
Lionel Stevenson ascends on an escalator toward the platform.
As a train driver, Lionel's made thousands of journeys all across Britain, but none quite
like this.
Today, Lionel's about to drive the first passenger train through the Channel Tunnel.
Six months ago, the Channel Tunnel was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II and French
President Francois Mitterrand. A month after that, freight trains began operating. But the first
paying passengers had to wait until additional safety checks were conducted and terminals had been
completed. Now the Channel Tunnel passenger service is finally ready to begin. As Lionel reaches the top
of the escalator, he's met by the sound of a brass band. Smartly dressed waiter circulate with
silver platters of canopays and champagne. But Lionel waves them off as he makes his way down the platform to
the front of the train. There, photographers capture the moment as Lionel climbs into the driver's
compartment. Reporters ask him questions about how he's feeling ahead of the first journey of the
most expensive transportation project in history. Lionel just smiles and assures them he's feeling
happy and confident. Several onlookers then ask Lionel for his autograph, and he willingly
signs his name, laughing at the idea of being a celebrity for the day. Lionel then checks the
instruments as a second driver joins him at the front of the train. Then, as passengers begin to
board, Lionel's nerves creep in. He and his partner have completed this journey numerous times in
testing, but this is the first train carrying paying passengers. If anything goes wrong or if they're
delayed, it will make headlines for all the wrong reasons. Moments before the train is due to
leave, Lionel's supervisor arrives to offer a last-minute pep talk. But then the supervisor notices
that neither driver is wearing the correct uniform.
They're missing their hats.
Lionel realizes they must have left them in their lockers.
After a hurried conference,
three men decide to go on without their headwear,
figuring it's better to arrive in France on time and underdressed
than be late wearing their hats.
With a final blow of the guard's whistle,
Lionel pushes the controls and the train departs.
It's just one minute behind schedule,
and they quickly make up the deficit on the journey.
Less than three hours after leaving London,
Lionel's train arrives in Paris.
It's the first of countless successful journeys underneath the English Channel.
Today, the Channel Tunnel transports passengers not just from London to Paris, but also to Brussels and Amsterdam,
and over 18 million people used the service every year.
But years of construction were required before the first passengers could travel through the Channel Tunnel on the inaugural service,
which left Waterloo Station bound for Europe on November 14, 1994.
Next on History Daily, November 17, 1989.
A student demonstration in Prague is violently shut down by the police,
sparking the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia.
From Noisor and Ayrship, this is History Daily,
hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazi, sound designed by Molly Bond, music by throm.
This episode is written and researched by Owen Paul Nichols,
edited by Scott Reeves, managing producer Emily,
Burr, executive producers are William Simpson for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noisery.
