logo
Hero ex-jockey who ferried injured children to safety on quad bike after horror bus crash ‘couldn't sleep' after tragedy

Hero ex-jockey who ferried injured children to safety on quad bike after horror bus crash ‘couldn't sleep' after tragedy

The Sun4 days ago
A HERO ex-jockey who ferried children to safety from the horrific bus crash in Somerset has revealed that he couldn't sleep following the tragedy.
Alan Jones, 64, drove passengers to safety on the back of his quad bike after they escaped the crash site.
6
6
6
On Thursday, a bus carrying 60 to 70 pupils from Minehead Middle School fell off a 20ft slope.
The vehicle was returning from a trip to Exmoor Zoo, before leaving the A396 at Cutcombe Hill and falling from the height.
Alan, an ex-jockey, took eight adults and children to the Rest and Be Thankful Inn in Wheddon Cross - following the horrifying crash.
The heroic driver used his quad bike to travel across the nearby fields, after the road was closed.
However, the sights he saw left him unable to sleep when he got home.
Opening up about the crash, Alan said: "It's the most remote place.
"The children coming out of that accident wouldn't have known where they were.
"I think it would have been wrong not to try and help. I was there in under 10 minutes.
"When I got there, the road was closed and the police were everywhere. Everybody was just looking at the bus.
"I didn't know there were any fatalities at the time, but I knew there were children still in the bus, and all of the police officers were just basically around the bus and there wasn't anybody else about, really; I was the only local person there."
Alan said that he helped two teachers on the side of the road first.
Whilst driving the two women towards the pub, he saw a group of children and one adult who had been instructed to head to the pub.
The inn was being used as a safe hub for the bus's passengers.
Alan said that the group didn't know where they were, when he reached them.
He said: "They were just sort of stranded there. They didn't know what was going on, really.
"They wouldn't have known where they were and there were high trees behind and in front of them because the road runs through the cliff a bit.
"You could see they were injured and crying and upset.
"It was too far, these were very young middle school children. They'd just been upside down in a bus, over a cliff, all the windows had broken in the bus, and they'd scrambled out and been helped out by emergency services.
6
"I presume some of them were told to make their way up but they just couldn't walk up."
Two teachers were picked up by an ambulance, while Alan worked to get the others to the inn.
He says that the teachers and their pupils were a 'sorry sight', but everyone nearby 'dropped everything' to help.
One teacher said to him that they were 'never going back on a bus or coach ever again'.
When he got to the top, ambulances picked up the two women so he returned to pick up another teacher and child.
Sadly, a 10-year-old boy died in the crash and six children and three adults are still in hospital.
A resident in West Somerset has launched a GoFundMe campaign to support those affected.
The campaign has already raised more than £15,000 in just a day.
Despite having no direct connections to those affected by the crash, Bobbie Raymond said he launched the fund because he had a 'strong desire' to help.
He wrote on the fundraising page: "We are all heartbroken by the tragic school bus crash that occurred on the A396 on July 17.
6
6
"Our thoughts and deepest sympathies are with the children, families, staff, and emergency responders affected by this devastating event.
"As a father of two young children myself, I can only begin to imagine the pain and heartbreak that so many are experiencing right now.
"This tragedy has shaken the local community, and like many others, I felt a strong desire to do what I could to help.
"I understand this is a sensitive time, and while the specific use of the fund will be shaped by the needs of those involved my promise is to ensure it reaches the people who need it most."
One schoolgirl, Emily Manning, 10, climbed onto the bus as it was preparing to leave but was told to get off at the last minute.
She was told that the bus was already full and that she needed to get on the other coach.
Emily got on the other bus which returned her home safely, while the other veered off the 20ft slope.
She said: "It had been a really nice day at the zoo. I wanted to go on the second coach because that's where my friends were but there were too many people so I got off.
"Everybody was in front of me and that meant I couldn't. I was upset because my friends were on that bus but also lucky.'
Her dad, Nick Manning, 48, a window cleaner from Minehead, said: "I just feel incredibly grateful that she wasn't on it. I got a phone call when I was still at work asking me if I had picked up Emily yet because something terrible had happened.
"It's every parent's nightmare, it's absolutely awful. I had constant messages and phone calls checking Emily was ok. People were panicking."
An off-duty firefighter also pulled over upon seeing the crash and climbed down to the coach, before pulling passengers from the wreckage.
Gavin Ellis, Chief Fire Officer for Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service, said: "We were mobilised to a major incident to a coach that had overturned onto its roof and slip approximately 20ft (6.1m) down an embankment.
"I'm grateful to the off-duty firefighter who was travelling behind the coach at the point of the collision who was able to start taking immediate [action] to start releasing those casualties from the bus."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Vintage train carriage lifted from couple's garden in Somerset
Vintage train carriage lifted from couple's garden in Somerset

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Vintage train carriage lifted from couple's garden in Somerset

A rare, vintage train carriage which a couple had used as makeshift shed has been lifted out of their garden to be donated to a railway Somerset and Dorset Railway Trust will restore the carriage, which a couple found in their new home's garden. It was lifted from their property by a 100-tonne-crane on Cripps and George Pike from Cannington in Somerset decided to donate the carriage to get it "back to where it deserves to be"."It's really unusual. A lovely little surprise when we viewed the house," Ms Cripps said. The couple moved into the home two years ago and had used the carriage "as a shed" until they decided to donate it in March this year."We just knew we couldn't take care of it properly," Mr Pike Marshman, director of the trust, came to pick up the carriage and said it was "like Christmas"."How often do you get a railway carriage at the back of a garden? We snapped it up," he added. According to Mr Marshman, the carriage had likely been retired in 1930, after being built in 1880. It is one of only five of its kind in will be restored at Shillingstone in Dorset, which used to be part of the Somerset line."It had a good life before it was retired," Mr Marshman added."The idea is to get a whole train fully restored with passengers. It would be a dream come true."

Donegal: Three people rescued from sinking fishing vessel
Donegal: Three people rescued from sinking fishing vessel

BBC News

time5 hours ago

  • BBC News

Donegal: Three people rescued from sinking fishing vessel

Three people have been rescued after their fishing vessel began taking on water off the coast of County Donegal in the Republic of before 8:00 local time on Wednesday, a mayday call was received by Malin Head coastguard, the Department of Transport has said.A nearby fishing vessel responded to the distress call near Glengad and successfully rescued all three individuals from the stricken coastguard, the Sligo-based coastguard helicopter rescue 118 and the Lough Swilly RNLI were all dispatched to the scene. In a post on social media, Lough Swilly RNLI said the vessel had already sunk its three crew had been recovered from a life raft by a nearby fishing were then transferred to the Greencastle coastguard boat and brought to Bunagee Pier, where they were assessed by an ambulance crew.

Firefighters rescue kitten trapped between walls in Birstall
Firefighters rescue kitten trapped between walls in Birstall

BBC News

timea day ago

  • BBC News

Firefighters rescue kitten trapped between walls in Birstall

Firefighters were called to rescue a feral kitten trapped between two exterior walls at a house in were alerted just after 12:00 BST on Monday, when a resident on Curzon Avenue in Birstall reported hearing distressed cries from a cat removed a fence panel and spent 40 minutes using specialist equipment, including a camera, to locate the Fire and Rescue Service said the feline had "been through quite an ordeal" and was taken to a local vet to be checked over.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store