The Parade Was Proof That All’s Well That Ends Well
She might have been any other 19-month-old girl. She was dressed in an orange-and-black Halloween jumper and said “Trick or treat” as her mother held her. But this was a news conference Thursday at Midland (Tex.) Memorial Hospital, the first public appearance of Jessica McClure since she was rescued Oct. 16 after being trapped 58 1/2 hours in a well. “I can’t explain what it’s like to one day think you’ve lost your daughter, and a matter of weeks later see her smiling and saying, ‘Da, Da,’ ” said her father, Chip McClure, who thanked the more than 400 volunteers involved in her rescue. And then Midland held a parade to thank them, too. From a hospital window, Jessica watched the progress of marchers with pink balloons and ribbons, two marching bands, a float bearing a six-foot square get-well card signed by almost 20,000 people, another flatbed trailer piled with stuffed toys from well-wishers and a sign reading “We’re tickled pink,” and, to great cheers from the crowd, the large, green “rat-hole” drill used in the rescue. The parade wound about 1 1/2 miles from the hospital to a downtown plaza, where the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce handed out pieces of a pink, 360-pound angel food cake that proclaimed, “Thanks, y’all.”
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.