National Post

Rescued just in time

- Sydney Page

Lilly Baker was driving to meet some friends in Limestone County, Ala., in early February, when she spotted a woman with a wheelchair who was struggling to cross the railroad tracks on foot.

“She was just walking along the train tracks with her wheelchair in front of her. She was using it as a stabilizer,” said Baker, 18, adding that the woman was labouring as she tried to walk. Since her wheelchair couldn’t clear the tracks, she was attempting to use it help her walk across — but she was stuck.

Baker pulled up beside the tracks to see if she could help. Then she saw a train approachin­g.

“I got out of my car and I went over to her, and by the time I got to her, the lights started flashing on the train and the horn was going off,” recalled Baker, who lives in Athens, Ala. “I grabbed her from behind her arms and I tried to pick her up and walk with her, and we fell.”

Baker tried a second time to carry the woman off the tracks — and they fell again.

“The train was so close to us, we had no time to go anywhere,” Baker said. “It was a nerve-racking situation.”

One more time, as the train drew terrifying­ly near, “I grabbed as hard as I could to get her out of there,” she continued, explaining that she pulled the woman by her jacket.

Baker said she wasn’t worried about putting herself at risk.

“I could not leave her there,” she said.

Baker narrowly saved the woman’s life — and her own. An employee of the railroad company, CSX, later told Baker the train was less than 20 inches away from hitting them both.

The train did, in fact, clip the woman’s feet, leading to two broken ankles. It also wrecked the woman’s wheelchair.

“My adrenalin was rushing,” said Baker, noting that she sat with the woman — who seemed disoriente­d and was in pain — at the side of the train tracks. Baker saw a nearby worker and told them to call an ambulance, as her cellphone was still in the car.

“I was just sitting there crying,” Baker said, adding that the train operator halted the train and came to check on them right away.

The woman is still in the hospital, but is recovering well, police said.

“It was a bad injury,” said Jereme Robison, chief of police for the Ardmore Police Department, who responded to the scene on Feb. 5. Fortunatel­y, though, “she’s going to be fine.”

“Due to medical reasons, she is not able to be interviewe­d at this moment,” Robison said, explaining that she lives in an apartment building across from the train tracks, and on the day Baker saved her, the woman was taking a shortcut after she left her home.

“It’s not a safe place to cross (with) a wheelchair,” Robison said, adding that the woman has both mental health and physical challenges. “She can barely walk.”

“She’s really a hero,” he added.

 ?? ARDMORE POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? When Lilly Baker spotted a woman get stuck with her wheelchair last month on this railroad track in Alabama, she got out of her car and dragged the woman
away from the tracks.
ARDMORE POLICE DEPARTMENT When Lilly Baker spotted a woman get stuck with her wheelchair last month on this railroad track in Alabama, she got out of her car and dragged the woman away from the tracks.

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