A mother and her three children had a
'miracle' escape after their car was swept into a swollen river when two
lost workmen dragged them out of the boot.
Mariel
Murphy, 38, was driving home after dropping her mother off at a train
station when she went through a ford causing her engine to cut out.
Seconds
later her three-year-old VW Polo was hit by a powerful torrent of water
smashing it into a bridge and trapping her and her three young children
inside.
Rescued: Mariel Murphy with her children Joseph, six, Gia, 18 months, and Hayden, three
The family's VW Polo trapped in water by the ford between Churchover and Harborough Magna, Warwickshire
The terrifying accident happened
at 6pm on February 14 when Mrs Murphy, a photographer, was driving
through the ford which crossed the River Swift near their home in
Harborough Magna, Rugby, Warkwickshire.
Mrs Murphy
managed to dial 999 and the fire service rushed to rescue her but
before they arrived the icy water filled up the car to their chins.
At one terrifying moment, Mrs Murphy
and her three children, Joseph, six, Hayden, three, and 18-month-old
daughter Gia, could only breath by pushing themselves against the roof
of the car.
But the family were saved when two workmen who had got lost spotted them and managed to haul them out of hatchback's boot.
Mrs Murphy
said today: 'I started driving through the ford when the car cut out
and then we got carried off to the right and into the bridge.
'It
was a really strong current so I rang the fire brigade and thought I'd
wait. But water was getting in and within minutes it had risen to my
knees.
The accident happened at 6pm on February 14 when Mrs Murphy was taking the family home
The family were rescued by a pair of passing
workmen who waded into the freezing water and managed to open the boot
before dragging the four of them out
Having only moved to Churchover with husband
Kevin a week earlier, Mrs Murphy did not know the road well and
struggled to see the extent of the flooding due to the pitch black
Mrs Murphy managed to dial 999 and the fire
service rushed to rescue her but before they arrived the icy water
filled up the car to their chins
The ford where it happened runs over the River Swift near the family's home in Harborough Magna, Rugby, Warkwickshire
THOSE WHO DIDN'T ESCAPE: THE DEATH TOLL OF UK FLOODING
In April last year a respected judge drowned in his car after a satnav directed his wife into a heavily flooded ford.
Jonathan
Gammon died alongside his pet dog Gabby after his Toyota Yaris was
overcome by water and swept more than 100 metres downstream.
His
wife Priscilla Turner managed to escape and when she was helped out of
the river she told her rescuer: ‘I’ve killed my husband’.
An
inquest heard she had been driving her husband to work when the
satellite navigation system sent her into a swollen ford in Headley,
Hampshire.
In November, 91-year-old Margaret Hughes was found dead after flood water rushed into her home in St Asaph, North Wales.
Neighbours said the grandmother remained in her home when the River Elwy burst its banks despite pleas for her to evacuate.
Some 500 properties were flooded when the tiny city was left under 5ft of water.
The
same month another 91-year-old went missing from his home in the
Woodley area of Reading. A body believed to be of Franciscus Van De
Gender was later found further down the river at Wargrave, Berkshire.
'My three children were screaming in
the back - the water was nearly up to their chins. I didn't panic at
first and had just been trying to reassure my children, but at this
point I really started to worry.
'I
then looked across and saw two men in a van nearby, but the electrics
had cut out and I couldn't open the windows so I started banging and
waving to get their attention.'
Workmen
Neal Bliss and Stephen Andrews, both in their 40s, had got lost and
broken down after their Sat Nav diverted them off the M1 after the
motorway was closed following an accident.
When they heard Mrs Murphy's
desperate cries for help they waded through the rising flood water and
managed to open the boot of the car which was poking out the water.
Mrs Murphy
added: 'They (the workmen) were just amazing, they were so brave and
strong. The fire brigade said afterwards they shouldn't have done it,
but I'm just glad they were there to help us.
'It's a miracle they were there and I'm hugely grateful to them. They saved myself and my three children.'
The family were examined by paramedics but were given the all clear.
Husband
Kevin, 41, a managing director of a media planning agency, said: 'It
doesn't bear thinking about what could have happened.
'If
those two workmen hadn't broken down or been there Mariel and the
children would have been completely submerged in the freezing water.'
A
spokesman for West Midlands Ambulance Service said: 'Had the car not
been a hatchback and had the two men not come to their aid so quickly,
the outcome may have been very different.
'Our praise must go to the two men for acting so quickly.'
DAILYMAIL
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