Connect with us

Smile

Two middle schoolers saved their bus driver who had a stroke while driving

Published

on

  • Two middle schoolers are being hailed for their heroic actions that saved their bus driver’s life.
  • Julie Williamson was driving a bus ful of students when she began experiencing symptoms of a mini stroke.
  • Seventh-graders Conner Doss and Kane Daugherty ran to the front of the bus to help Julie, called for help and calmed their fellow students.

On. Oct. 1, a bus full of students was en route to East Paulding Middle School in Dallas, Georgia when their bus driver, Julie Williamson, began feeling sick. She was able to safely pull the bus to the side of the road, and seventh graders Conner Doss and Kane Daugherty ran to the front of the bus.

“I come in the aisle, and then I look down and Miss Julie’s face is just bright red and shaking,” Conner told local Atlanta station WSB-TV.

Conner kept the other students calm and directed them to the back of the bus while Kane assisted Julie. 

“I hear her say, ‘Hey! Somebody help!’ So I run up. She’s over here shaking really bad,” Kane recalled. “I picked up the [radio dispatch] and said, ‘Somebody help. Somebody help, our bus drive feels really dizzy.’”

Photo Credit: wsbtv

A dispatcher called the bus’s phone and instructed Kane on how to set the emergency brake, flashing lights and flashing stop sign. The dispatcher then called 911.

“We know she’s got diabetes, so we thought maybe it was an attack. We got her to drink Coke, eat cookies, and all of that,” Kane said.

The two students opened a bus window and began waving down passing cars, hoping someone would stop to help before the ambulance arrived. A pastor pulled over, ran onto the bus and gathered the students to pray while waiting for the ambulance.

“That was a moment of relief, I think, for Ms. Julie and for us too to know God was on our side,” Kane said.

Julie is now at home recovering from what doctors believe was a mini-stroke thanks to the boys’ heroic efforts. Conner and Kane were recognized at the Board of Education meeting on Oct. 12.

Advertisement

“I am incredibly proud of Kane and Conner for jumping into action to help their bus driver and make sure their classmates were safe,” East Paulding Principal Tom Alverson wrote in an email to Southern Living.

“Without them stepping up and saying what they did, I don’t necessarily know if I’d be here today. They deserve the world,” said Julie. “They are my heroes.”

Source: Tank’s Good News

Advertisement

Trending