A Look Back -- Jerry Person
Jerry Person
Acts of heroism are anything but rare to the residents of Huntington
Beach and this week we will look at how a father and son, along with a
California Highway patrolman, risked a blazing inferno to save the life
of a young sailor.
Fifty years ago Pacific Coast Highway did not have the heavy traffic
at night like we have today. In fact, it was not unusual to see the
highway deserted of late night traffic. On Oct. 8, 1052, Loys R. Mills
was driving along our coast highway in a large lumber truck. The road was
dark as pitch and just after 10 p.m. Although he didn’t know it, the next
few minutes would alter four lives forever.
A young sailor, Roy R. Delane, from San Diego was traveling through
our town on the same coast highway. Delane was on leave from his ship the
USS Bremerton. As he neared 15th Street on Pacific Coast Highway,
Delane’s car for some reason crashed into Mills’ lumber truck. The
accident sent lumber in all directions on the highway and if it had been
daytime more serious injuries could have resulted. California Highway
Patrolman Lloyd Groover was patrolling the highway from Seal Beach to
Huntington Beach south, and as he neared 18th Street he heard the sounds
of a crash just ahead of him. So he stepped on the gas to get to the
scene. Huntington Beach residents John Wigmore and his son John Jr. also
heard the crash and hurried over to help.
When Groover and the Wigmores arrived at the scene they found lumber
strewn all over the ground. They spotted what was left of Delane’s car, a
mass of bent steel with smoke pouring out from its insides. They could
barely see the car’s driver because of the smoke coming from under the
car’s dashboard. The three men found Delane conscious, praying and
pinned under the steering wheel. That’s when they noticed the strong
smell of gasoline coming from the car. Under the beam of Groover’s
headlights they could see gasoline running out from under Delane’s car
and unto the road. Without a thought to their safety the three men began
the rescue of a stranger from a burning car. Should a spark from the
flames have caught the gasoline below then all would be burned to death.
Patrolman Groover tried to open the driver’s door but found it was
jammed. He went around to the passenger side and was able to open that
door. Gasoline continued to pour out as the seconds passed turning into
minutes. They found that Delane had two broken legs as they attempted his
rescue. As the men’s hearts beat faster another problem developed.
Delane’s feet were wedged between the floorboards of the bent car. The
driver kept pleading to leave him and save themselves. The heat was
becoming unbearable but the three continued without a second thought of
danger. Groover cut the laces of Delane’s right shoe and pulled his foot
out. But his left foot was so wedged in that the men had to cut Delane’s
shoe apart to get his foot out. All this time Delane continued telling
the men to get back to safety. The flames continued, but the gasoline
still didn’t catch fire. The air around the men was getting hotter and
hotter, but at last they were able to pull Delane from the fiery furnace
that had once been his car.
Gasoline was now saturated over about 20 feet of pavement under the
car and was spreading out. By now the Huntington Beach Fire Department
had arrived at the scene and it was quick work for them to put out the
fire and to keep the gasoline from catching fire. Delane’s prayers were
answered that night and all four men cheated death in those few heroic
minutes, that must have seemed like a lifetime. Mills and Groover
returned to their work. Delane was transported to the Naval hospital in
Long Beach where he recovered from two broken legs and a broken hip. As
for Wigmore and his son, Huntington Beach awoke the next morning to find
it had two new heroes.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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