|
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A Leesburg, Ga., truck driver
has rescued plenty of motorists from wrecked or overturned vehicles in
his 30-year career. But when he needed help in a fiery three-truck
accident near Atlanta on Aug. 25, it was his rescuer, Douglas Crawford,
of Ashford, Ala., who helped save the life of one of his own.
Crawford, a driver for Saia Motor Freight Lines Inc., was named Thursday
night as the 23rd Goodyear North America Highway Hero. (Saia is
pronounced Sigh΄ Uh.) Leesburg truck driver Herman Langford
said Crawford deserved the award for helping him to cheat death.
“I’ve helped others, but they were nothing like my accident.
That man saved my life,” Langford said.
Traveling southbound on Interstate 85 in Coweta County, Georgia,
Crawford said he watched the accident unfold. What he didn’t see
was a hit-and-run truck driver allegedly rear-end a Roadway truck,
causing the driver to lose control and cross the grass median into the
northbound lanes.
According to police reports, the Roadway 18-wheeler collided with
Langford’s Sexton Farms Trucking tractor-trailer. Both tractors
exploded into flames. Dodging out-of-control cars trying to avoid
the accident, Crawford immediately parked on the highway shoulder and
ran across the median.
The cab of the runaway truck had disintegrated in the fire.
Knowing that no one could survive long in the flames, he ran to the
Sexton Farms tractor-trailer, which was burning in the ditch. He
sprayed his extinguisher on the blaze and found Langford conscious but
unable to move.
Crawford noticed the back wall of the sleeper unit
was destroyed, so he was able to walk into the tractor where Langford
was covered in diesel fuel. Realizing that time was running out,
Crawford told Langford to wrap his arms around his neck.
Grabbing Langford’s shoulders, Crawford pulled him from the burning
truck to a safe area in the ditch. Moments later, the tractor
exploded. A nurse, who had stopped at the accident, administered
first aid until paramedics arrived. Langford was airlifted to the
hospital.
Crawford said he still keeps in contact with Langford, who is recovering
from multiple injuries. The hit-and-run driver called police when
he reached his destination and admitted his role in the accident.
He was later arrested.
Crawford accepted the award, a $10,000 U.S. Savings Bond and a specially
designed Goodyear Highway Hero ring during the Mid America Trucking Show
here.
“Too often, we only hear criticism about trucks and drivers, but
that’s not our view of the trucking industry. We know that most
drivers are hardworking, safe and courteous. And in the cases of
Doug Crawford and the three other Highway Hero finalists, these drivers
stopped to help others without regard for their own lives,” said Peter
Christoffersen, general manager of marketing for Goodyear commercial
tire systems.
“In our eyes, they’re all heroes,” Christoffersen added.
Founded by Goodyear in 1983, the Highway Hero program recognizes
professional truck drivers and the often unnoticed, life-saving rescues
and roadside assistance they provide as their jobs take them across
North America.
Crawford was selected along with three other truck drivers as finalists
for the 2005 award. Other finalists included:
- Danny Wallen, of Conover, Ohio, driver for ABF
Freight System Inc. – Wallen saved a Tennessee couple on
Interstate 65 in Nashville on Sept. 9, when their stalled car was
struck by a sport-utility vehicle and caught fire. He and two
others, however, were unable to save the couple’s 17-year-old
daughter, who was trapped in the backseat of the burning car.
- Robert A. Starr, of North Troy, Vt., driver for
Starr’s Transportation – Starr saved a Quebec woman when a
roadway culvert collapsed near Trois Rivieres in Quebec on Sept. 14.
The women’s car and Starr’s truck caught fire as they hit the
caving pavement.
- Michael Knott, of Casselberry, Fla., driver for
FedEx Ground – Knott saved a woman and her baby daughter from
oncoming traffic as they lay on the Florida Turnpike in Osceola
County on Oct. 13. The woman was carrying her baby after her
car stalled, and she was struck by another car.
|