HERO'S UNTIMELY END
BRAVE ACTION CAUSES DEATH Just over a month after performing an act of heroism a young man who, following a hard fight against fate, was trying to get on his feet, died in London under sad circumstances. He was John Albert Richards, aged 25, whose gallant attempt to rescue a drowning man from the Thames won deserved commendations. Complications set up by hunger and hardship and his plunge into the icy river brought about his untimely end. On December 5 Richards, who had been out of work for a year, was walking along the Thames Embankment, near Charing Cross, when he saw a man, later identified as Michael Joseph Corridan, get on to the parapet. Describing the incident at the inquest Richards stated: " I shouted to him to come back, and managed to grasp his coat, but he wriggled through and fell into the water. "I took off mv overcoat and cap, and dived in after him, but, although I got hold of him on two occasions, he struggled away from me each time. I was too numb to make a third attempt, and two men threw me a rope to get me out." The coroner, Mr Ingleby Oddie, called Richards a hero, and said he hoped the police would see that his deed was brought to the notice of the Carnegie Fund trustees. Richards was cared for in hospital, and later was given n job as a car cleaner by Henlys, the motor agents. On starting work he remarked: "For the last 12 months I have lived on the few shillings a week I have made by doing odd jobs. Now that I have this job I mean to make good." Richards worked only a month when he was taken ill at his home at Tottenham. _ He waa removed to hospital, where he died. His sister-in-law stated that he never properly' recovered from the effects of his immersion in the Thames . "He was overjoyed," she said, "at getting a job after being out of work for so long, but at the same time he comnlained of pains in his chest and back. He was an extraordinarily fine character with whom life had dealt unkindly. He never once referred to the Thames episode, and did not consider himself a hero. "For months before he had been sleeping out. Wo did not know of his plight until wo road of his divine into the water, and tlion. when ho left hospital, wo oflVred him shelter in our home." ' Mr IT. G. Henly. head of Henlys. Ltd., stated ho was franklv doubtful about Richard's ability to do much work, as his physical state seemed so poor. 'But a youngster in bis condition who would dive into tho rivor in December deserved n chance." added Mr Honlv. "and T cave him ono. And mv doubt? were qnito satisfied. TTo wo-korl splondidly. and I have novo" r "'t Mi« loss of an employee more keep l '' "
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Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 22824, 7 March 1936, Page 23
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495HERO'S UNTIMELY END Otago Daily Times, Issue 22824, 7 March 1936, Page 23
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