View Full Version : 'Baby Jessica' All
Grown Up
Royalpurple209
01-30-2006, 05:45 PM
'Baby Jessica' All Grown Up
MIDLAND, Texas, Jan. 30,
2006
http://www.cbsnews.com/images/2006/01/30/image1252975g.jpg
(AP)
"Baby Jessica," whose dramatic rescue from an abandoned Texas well was televised
across the country 18 years ago, got married in a private ceremony, People
magazine reported on its Web site.
Crews struggled for 58 hours to
rescue Jessica McClure after she fell into a pipe in an old well in October
1987.
The celebrity magazine reported that McClure, now 19, married
Daniel Morales, 32, at a rural church outside Midland on Saturday. A sign on the
door instructed guests not to take pictures or video, the magazine said.
The two met at a day-care center where Morales' sister worked with
McClure, according to the magazine.
The case of 18-month-old Jessica
created a nationwide sensation. Emergency crews rescued her - a dramatic moment
covered on live television - after digging a parallel shaft and then breaking
through the wall of the
well.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/01/30/national/main1252976.shtml
Royalpurple209
01-30-2006, 06:03 PM
'Baby Jessica' Marries Small -Town
Sweetheart
http://img.timeinc.net/people/i/2006/news/060206a/jmcclure.jpg
Jessica
McClure, at her 2004 high school graduation ceremony
MIDLAND, Texas
– Jessica McClure, the toddler who captured the nation's heart and evoked its
prayers 18 years ago from 22 feet below the surface of this oil patch town, is a
married woman.
McClure – now 19 and a student at Midland College –
was married Saturday to Daniel Morales, 32, at a Church of Christ in a small
rural community outside of the town. The couple met at a day-care center where
Morales’s sister worked with the bride.
Inside, the church sanctuary was
decorated with loops of white tulle for the private afternoon ceremony. At the
altar was a white archway, and suspended underneath were two open hearts,
mirroring the interlocking hearts on the couple’s wedding invitation. Posted on
the door was a request made to guests: "No Cameras or Picture Phones! No Video
Cameras" – a message in step with the extremely private McClure family.
"She's always been that way, just laid-back and not a lot of fanfare,"
says Cedie Proctor, an aunt of Jessica’s.
McClure – known to the world
as Baby Jessica – was 18 months old when she fell into a narrow, abandoned well
in the back yard of her aunt's home in 1987. Within hours, scores of rescue
workers were feverishly boring into the earth, hoping to reach her before she
succumbed to the cold. After 58 hours and with a global audience, two paramedics
plucked Jessica from the well and brought her to safety.
At 25, McClure
stands to earn a trust fund reportedly valued in excess of $1 million, made up
of contributions from well-wishers around the world.
"She's 'Baby
Jessica,' everybody’s baby," Morales recently told PEOPLE.
Those who
know McClure say she's a quiet person and that the family long ago decided to
strongly resist attention for the famous event that occurred almost 20 years
ago. One of the only clues to the impending wedding was a Wal-Mart registry.
"She hardly talked," says Abby Casas, who went to Greenwood County High
School with Jessica, who graduated in 2004. "But everybody knew who she was."
http://people.aol.com/people/articles/0,19736,1154151,00.html
(http://people.aol.com/people/articles/0,19736,1154151,00.html)
Royalpurple209
01-30-2006, 06:09 PM
'Everybody's Baby'
Midland rescuers remember saving
'Baby Jessica'
By D. Lance Lunsford
Staff Writer
It was 15
years ago today that rescuers took a collective sigh of relief after having
worked 58 hours to free I8-month-old Jessica McClure from a well in the backyard
of 3309 Tanner Drive. Today, reliving the event, helps many of those who took
part in the rescue to cope with the aftermath. The test evoked in that 58-hour
rescue revealed more about the men and women who worked at the scene than they
knew about themselves. Their triumph also revealed the true spirit and heart of
the small obscure West Texas town of which so-many people around the world had
never heard.
The Response
Midland Police officer Andy Glasscock
was the first to arrive on the scene, on the morning of Oct. 14, 1987. He heard
the call during a meeting to review the MPD's new and enhanced 911 system. "I
heard the call that there was possibly a girl stuck in a hole," Glasscock
recalled 15 years later.
In route to the home, Glasscock could not have
possibly fathomed what lie ahead of him.
"Basically, once I got there, I
could not leave, because I could hear her little voice and knew there was a
little child in that well," Glasscock said.
KMID cameraman Phil Huber
(http://www.vidpros.com/phil.htm) was already taping footage. The child's
mother, Reba "Cissy McClure, along with concerned neighbors, gathered at the
site. Marie Petronella was one of those neighbors.
"Maxine (Sprague --
the neighbor next door to the home where Jessica fell in the well) called me,"
Ms. Petronella said. "She said that Jessica fell in the well. It all seemed so
unreal. It was just like you are there, but it's not real."
Glasscock and fellow MPD Officer Manny Beltran began formulating a
plan. First, a KMID microphone was lowered into the well to determine whether
Jessica was still alive.
"We could hear her a little more plainly. She
wasn't really crying and didn't really seem upset," Glasscock said. Part of the
initial effort was finding a backhoe from a construction site.
"This was
playing it all by ear," said Glasscock. "We didn't know how far down she was."
Although it was used to dig, they first used its front end loader to remove the
fence.
By early afternoon, little headway had been made, but the task may
have seemed all too simple in the initial stages of the
rescue.
"They told us it was going to be pretty quick that they
would have her out of the well," said Lisa Wheeler, then a reporter for
KCRS-AM.
Drilling for Jessica
But there was little luck with the
backhoe, as officers soon found that Jessica may have slipped further down the
well due to the backhoe's vibration. By 2 p.m. on that first day, officers and
rescuers admitted they needed to take a different route.
"We decided we
needed drill," Glasscock said. One of the officers at the scene, while in route,
remembered seeing large auger drilling holes at the intersection of Andrews
Highway and Loop 250.
"They basically told the guy (operating the auger)
what was going on, and he pulled it out," Glasscock said.
Late that
afternoon, the drill was working its way into what would become a 29-foot rescue
shaft. City work crews lowered a camera, which was commonly used to inspect pipe
seams, down the well to determine Jessica's condition. They found her with knees
drawn up to her chest and face up in a 12- to 14-inch cavity.
And night
approached. Cooler fall winds had slowly begun to make their mark on the arid
West Texas plains, but so far, the benefit of an Indian summer gave rescuers
hope for a warm night. Just in case, officials developed a makeshift tubing
system to pump warm air and oxygen into the well by duct taping the tubing to a
traffic cone.
The cover of night enveloped the rescuers for the first
stretch of darkness with nonstop work continuing around the well.
"The
lights made it eerie,"Glasscock recalled. "We never knew what was going on in
the world. You never realized time until the end."
The world keeps
turning
And the world was still going on with its daily grind. Many of
the firefighters still around today have no recognition of an experience
surrounding the well. That's because they were carrying on the daily duties of
the Midland Fire Department.
Vaughn Donaldson, then a
firefighter-paramedic, said he responded in the normal avenues of service during
the Jessica rescue.
"I was doing the basic stuff we do every day,"
Donaldson said. "A lot of people forget, the show must go on. That was something
we kind of forgot. There was all sorts of things going on."
Indeed, the
behind-the-scenes effort may have contributed more to Jessica's rescue than
anyone could have imagined. Paul Hallmark worked in the Midland County Sheriff's
Office dispatch center as a communications supervisor.
"They started
calling for extra help with crowd control and blocking streets," said Hallmark,
who helped reached reserve deputies, warrant deputies and criminal investigation
division deputies. "The cool thing was all the people you could call up with a
major crisis and they would just say they would take care of
it."
Hallmark reached key players in the effort to gather rescue
equipment andpersonnel, including prominent Midlanders Clayton Williams and
Bobby Holt.
"They would say, "Hey, we need a flatbed truck, can you make
some'calls?" Instead of computers, we had two or three clipboards laying
around," said Hallmark. By the middle of that afternoon, we had a list of
companies and resources."
Eddie Klatt, now assistant fire chief of the
MFD, was a battalion chief at the time. He helped man phones in dispatch and
kept the daily duties working like a well-oiled machine.
"We got every
kind of call imaginable," Klatt said. "Some people had some really good
ideas."
Among those specialists called in by Thursday was Dave Lilly, an
official with the U.S. Bureau of Mines, who was flown in from Carlsbad, N.M. to
help facilitate the rescue as a new tunnel was drilled diagonally from the
rescue shaft.
As rescuers get closer
By Friday morning, at
approximately 4:30 a.m, Lilly broke through the wall of the well. Jessica seemed
aware of what was going on throughout the effort taking place.
"She's
making a lot of noise we made her really mad," Offiecr Jim White, an MPD
spokesman, told the Reporter Telegram early Friday, Oct. 16;
Lilly's
breakthrough was almost accidental. He leaned into the wall, not expecting a
breakthrough, when the wall finally gave.
"That's when they brought in
the hydrodrill," Glasscock said. "They tried to work Robert (O'Donnell) farther
in. They had to keep widening the hole. When they finally did get in there, she
was just so wedged in there, he couldn't just pull her out."
Around hour
50, O'Donnell emerged from the rescue shaft having fallen short of the rescue.
"When he came out, he was crying his eyes out," Donaldson said.
The
behind-the-scenes effort was perhaps one of the greatest accomplishments and
signs of a successful and empowered Midland community. Even Glasscock' s wife,
Lynn Glasscock - who was and is a nurse - worked with rescuers.
"She
ended up having to go to the pharmacy and getting all the KY Jelly they had,"
Glasscock said.
Near the end of the rescue, as O'Donnell worked to reach
Jessica' s feet and unwedge her, rescuers used the lubricant. O'Donnell
continued to use the hydrodrill to chip away the hard caliche that rescuers
still refer to as "prehistoric concrete."
At approximately 8 p.m., MFD
firefighter paramedic Steve Forbes rose slowly from the rescue shaft with
18-month-old Jessica McClure in his arms. Her head bandaged, her right palm
immobilized to her face, Jessica was quiet and calm as officials rushed. her
away and into an ambulance waiting in the alley behind Tanner
Drive.
Those who sacrificed
The men and women who stayed by that
hole for 58 hours would be impacted more than they ever imagined, and for one --
Robert O'Donnell - his friends said, he never emotionally was able to come out
of the well. Years after the rescue, he would take his own life.
Steve
Forbes is still a firefighter in Midland. Offficer Andy Glassock is still aa
officer with the Midland Police Department and lives in Greenwood -- two blocks
away from Jessica McClure. Paul Hallmark is now the technical investigations
advisor for the Midland County Sheriff's Office. Eddie Klatt is now the
assistant fire chief for the MFD. Officer Jim White still patrols the streets
with the MPD. Vaughn Donaldson is now a district chief of aircraft rescue
firefighters and stationed at Midland international Airport.
Cissy and
Chip McClure divorced in 1990. Both have since remarried. Chip lives in Plano,
and has another daughter named Christi. In 1997, he released a book he co-wrote
called "Halo Over the City." Cissy has also remarried. Jessica is 16 years old
and a junior at Midland Christian High School.
Classcock, who has
remained a longtime family friend of the McClures, said, "Now, her only worries
are grades and
boys."
http://www.caver.net/j/arch/index2002.html
Royalpurple209
01-30-2006, 06:10 PM
Tragedy of forgotten victim lingers, reveals lesson
learned
By D. Lance Lunsford
Staff Writer
It may be difficult for
some to understand what would drive a man considered a hero to kill
himself.
But the men of the Midland Fire Department who saw their friend
rise to fame as a worldwide hero do understand, and they work today to keep the
same from ever happening again.
The events surrounding the life and death
of Robert O'Donnell, the man who pulled Jessica McClure from the well, are more
important now than ever as new heroes are found every day especially in the
aftermath of 9-11.
"There were some tragedies, also," said MFD Assistant
Fire Chief Eddie Klatt, a battalion chief at the time, who compared the two
heroes of the Jessica rescue: O'Donnell and Steve Forbls. "Those two people were
total opposites, personality wise, in how they handled the situation. One
(Forbes) shunned the fanfare, and one (O'Donnell) enjoyed it to the
utmost."
In many ways, friends said, O'Donnell never recovered from the
injuries he sustained during the rescue and aftermath of the Jessica McClure
event. Many consider him the single and forgotten casualty in the rescue of the
18-month-old girl.
Vaughn Donaldson, who at the time served as a
firefighter-paramedic with the MidlandFire Department, was also a friend of
O'Donnell.
"When we're elevated to that hero status, that's too much to
live up to," Donaldson said.
Soon after O'Donnell's own emergence from
the shaft, he was overwhelmed by the news media, who searched for a hero to
relate to the event. As O Donnell was placed upon the shoulders of a collective
America, he soon became subservient to the world's influence, who looked at him
as a hero. Donaldson's, wife, Robbie Donaldson, watched her husband evolve in
the aftermath as members of the media asked for interviews, people offered
money, and O'Donnell joined the speaker's circuit. "He didn't expect it (hero
status) either, but if you hear things enough times, you begin to believe it
even though may or may not be true," Ms. O'Donnell said in a Discovery Channel
program, "Jessica.McClure -- What Happened After?"
And O'Donnell soon
developed what has been called acute post traumatic stress disorder.
The
adrenaline built throughout the rescue and it coupled with attention he received
following the rescue, according to friends, As the adrenaline surged through his
system, his body built a craving, and he had to feel a rush all of the time,
those friends and co-workers noted.
"I think Robert was stuck in that
event," Donaldson said. "And as long as it was built up, he was fine, but when
the attention went away, he couldn't handle it. I don't think Robert ever got
out of that well."
Others understand.
Police officer Andy
Glasscock was-the first officer to respond to the well on Oct. 14, 1987. From
that point on, he remained by the well with the exception of a few hours where
he tried to get some sleep. Instead he tossed and turned, trying to fight off
the adrenaline that had built in his body for so long.
"It' s almost like
cocaine or heroin ... it' s addicting. I had to have more of it," Glasscock
acknowledged years later. "That adrenaline rush was addictive like a
drug."
Even Glasscock saw there was something wrong with O'Donnell as the
years went by. Donaldson, himself, admits that he virtually ignored O'Donnell as
he reached out for help.
"This is not something we, as a department, are
proud of," said Donaldson. "It was the way we treated Robert after that
incident."
O'Donnell, who already had to carry a black duffel bag full of
the prescription medication he used to bout the depression, reached out for
help, He told people like Donaldson that he thought of killing
himself.
"In a way, I felt really guilty that we weren't more educated.
We all knew Robert was having a hard time. He asked me for help," said
Donaldson. "The advice I had for him was not adquate."
Glasscock, while
battling with his own depression and need for adrenaline and impact, almost lost
his marriage at that time. He too saw O'Donnell and feels the pain of not
knowing how to help.
"We were just a couple of good old West Texas boys,
who did their job. In the end, we never saw what was coming," Glasscock said.
"It nearly cost me a divorce. I had a really good wife who stuck with
me."
But the pressure and need O'Donnell felt compounded exponentially
with each passing day. Eventually, he gave up.
Just six days after the
OklahoIlla City bombing of the Alfred Murrah building in April of 1995,
O'Donnell drove to a remote part of his mother' s ranch and shot himself,
leaving behind two sons and his wife.
Today, it is something that may be
averted with more understanding. The first suicide casualty of the September
11th attacks has already made its mark, and Donaldson and other emergency
response personnel are worried more are to come.
Donaldson now travels
the country warning of the dangers of post traumatic stress. The importance
quite possibly has never been greater as America's vulnerability may bring
otherwise obscure Americans to hero status in the near future should the country
continue falling victim to terrorist attacks.
Royalpurple209
01-30-2006, 06:11 PM
Press personnel deal with aftermath
By D. Lance
Lunsford
Staff Writer
In those last nine and a half hours before
rescuers arose from the depths of a dark 25- foot rescue shaft, the world sat on
the edge of its seat.
The reporters who brought the story from
the back yard at 3309 Tanner Drive stood within feet of the work of rescuers,
waiting to relay the jubilant news of the rescue of 18-month-old Jessica
McClure.
While it seemed the end was near, many people at the scene grew
skeptical each time reports came that Jessica would soon emerge from the well.
Each time, it turned out to be a false alarm. In those final nine hours,
reporters, police, firefighters and EMS personnel waited ... and waited and
waited.
KMID's Rodney Wunsch, then 22, reported from the scene for most
of those 58 hours, first arriving on the scene at approximately 1 p.m.
Wednesday, October 14, 1987. By Friday, fatigue and frustration seemingly
overwhelmed him.
Lisa Wheeler, who was a radio reporter with KCRS-AM,
first arrived on the scene Wednesday just moments after the arrival of police.
By Friday, she stood atop a truck with Ramona Nye, a reporter for the Reporter
Telegram, in the alley where emergency crews would soon whisk Jessica from the
scene to Midland Memorial Hospital. "As the days turned into night, I found
myself sleeping in Maxine Sprague's back yard using a rock as a pillow," Ms.
Wheeler recalled.
But as it seemed imminent that Jessica would emerge,
somewhere around 8 p.m. Friday night, Midlanders and the World braced for joy.
Throngs of Midlanders awaited the news at Memorial Stadium, having momentarily
escaped the stress of Jessica' s struggle in the well by attending a high school
football game. Rick Wood, sales manager for KMID-TV, was one of those in the
stands. He watched the game with a radio in hand, tuned to the coverage of the
rescue.
"When we knew she was coming up, one of the police officers came
over and said, "This is it," said Ms. Wheeler.
Slowly, the rigging moved
over the rescue shaft, and the ropes connected to the carabiner on Steve Forbes'
harness began pulling the Midland Fire Department firefighter-paramedic to the
surface.
"At first, it was very spookily quiet," Said Wunsch, who watched
a monitor in the Spragues' backyard. "Watching the shaft, you start to see this
cable come up."
Rising to the surface Forbes held Jessica in his arms,
who was strapped to a backboard.
At the bottom of the shaft, left 29 feet
at the bottom of the well was Robert O'Donnell. He had worked to free Jessica
for hours after being hand-picked as the man to reach the little girl based on
his wiry frame.
The Reporter-TeIegram's Curt Wilcott, who had been
perched atop an A-frame ladder for nine hours waiting for Jessica to emerge
looked over his left shoulder. Atop a manlift, more than 20 feet in the air, was
Scott Shaw, the photographer with the Odessa-American with a bird's-eye view.
The fence where his ladder was stretched was bulging and leaning as other
photographers - from international agencies, newspapers and television stations
-- waited for the perfect shot.
Wilcott aimed his lens as Forbes' head
came into view. Her head bandaged in white gauze and her left hand set in place
along her cheek, a calming hush fell over the crowd for a brief
second.
Then a thumbs-up went into the air. And the rescuers converged,
rushing foward.
"The drawback was when they actually brought her out, all
these people were standing around," Wilcott said. "A lot of the shots were of
backs."
Wilcott, however, was able to get off one shot.
Shaw, on
the other hand, had an ideal vantage point.
"From his vantage point, he
was able to capture her face," Wilcott said.
Shaw later won the Pulitzer
Prize for his photo.
In a swift movement, Forbes was disconnected from
the cable and, while holding Jessica in his arms, was rushed off to an ambulance
waiting in the alley. Midland Police Officer Andy Glasscock, the first officer
on the scene, was bit by the Spragues' fence, which finally gave way. "I fell to
my knees and started crying," Glasscock said. " about that time, the reporters
hit the fence, and they pushed the fence over on me.
"When she was pulled
out, the ambulance left, and I was running down the alley," said John Foster,
then the general manager of KMID-TV, who was at the scene for most of the rescue
effort. "All of a sudden, all of these horns went off. The whole town was
responding."
Indeed, the whole town felt triumph. The collective spirit
of the city converged in a matter of moments as word spread from around that
little back yard where lights kept the area lit like day.
Wood, still
listening to the coverage by radio at the football game, heard news come across
the airwaves that Jessica was free.
"I was in the stands. All of a
sudden, it went quiet. It still gets to you," he said. "It got real quiet, and
the hems started in the distance."
The crowd erupted with joyous applause
as news came across Memorial Stadium's speakers that Jessica was pulled from the
well.
"For some unknown reason, I started crying," said Ms.
Wheeler.
"When the emotion hit me was when they brought her up," Wunsch
said.
The work was not done, however.
"It got really surreal. It
was like air was let out of a balloon. This tension in the air and this fatigue
ran over everyone" said Wunsch. "They wanted me to do a chronological wrap-up. I
couldn't do it. I just went on the air and fumbled for like a minute and a
half."
Wunsch walked over to the rescue shaft where O'Donnell had just
been retrieved.
"I looked down into the hole, which wasn't lit, and it
just went into this empty abyss," said Wunsch.
Soon, the world's media
converged on the rescue's most prominent heroes. Among them were Forbes,
O'Donnell and Glasscock.
Just moments after O'Donnell emerged from the
shaft, Jessica was already well on her way to Midland Memorial Hospital, and he
spoke on camera for KMID.
"Everybody that pitched in, I don't care what
they did anywhere else in the nation, the hours it took to get her out of there,
we got her out of there alive. It was all worth it," said O'Donnell.
For
a brief moment, O'Donnell did not believe the hype of the limelight.
And
the story was not over just because this little girl had been rescued. It was,
in many ways, just beginning.
The backyard where the rescue ended late
that Friday night was like a war zone. The fence had been removed in the initial
stages of the rescue, and the fence to the Spagues yard lay tattered and broken.
Equipment was everywhere, and the men who had worked for three days began
rolling cable and packing tools.
Tn the aftermath were thousands --
possibly millions -- of dollars in donations to the McClures to help with
medical bills. KMID's studios were covered in Winnie the Pooh bears and gifts.
The money began flowing into KMID so much, Foster and KMID officials established
an account for Jessica.
"People were wanting to know how they could help.
That's why we did that," said Kathy Swindler, KMID promotions
manager.
The rescue of Jessica McClure launched the image of hundreds of
heroes at the scene, but Forbes, O'Donnell, and Glasscock may have taken the
brunt of focus. The rush from the onslaught of media attention supplied the men
with a sustained adrenaline, which eventually became dangerous, and in one case
fatal.
Today, Rodney Wunsch works for Access Hollywood and the Tonight
Show with Jay Leno. He stayed in Midland for another year with KMID before
heading to California. He eventually played himself in the made-for-television
film depicting the rescue of Jessica McClure after being sought out by the
movie's producer in Los Angeles.
Patrick Crimmins, the former
Reporter-Telegram reporter who was the first print joumalist on the scene, works
in the public information division of the Texas Commission Environmental Quality
and lives in Austin. Ramona Nye works for the Texas Department of Agriculture in
Austin. Curt Wilcott took over his father' s Sign company in Odessain
1996.
Lisa Wheeler now works for Texas Parks and Wildlife in
Austin.
John Foster is now the general manager of KWES-TV. Rick Wood is
now sales manager for KWES-TV. Kathy Swindler is promotions manager for
KWES-TV.
Royalpurple209
01-30-2006, 06:13 PM
THIS IS THE BABY JESSICA RESCUE WEB
PAGE!
Wednesday October 14th, 1987 --9:30 AM CST through Friday
October 16th, 1987--8:30 PM CST
Timeline
http://www.caver.net/j/jrescue.html
Royalpurple209
01-30-2006, 08:33 PM
Wedding Registry
Welcome to JESSICA MCCLURE's and
DANIEL MORALES's Wedding Registry!
JESSICA MCCLURE and DANIEL MORALES
Wedding
January 28, 2006
MIDLAND,
TX
http://www.walmart.com/giftregistry/gr_detail.do?registryId=36453485002
crimeshot1
01-31-2006, 08:04 AM
Thank you for the updates, RP! I remember the Jessica
McClure story quite well, but never kept up with it. Interesting how it
negatively affected so many. :(
Stephie
02-20-2006, 12:25 PM
I read this in a magazine I couldn't belive how long ago
that she fell in the well .Boy I feel old
:rolleyes:
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