Firefighters deliver baby in a car while tackling boat blaze
The parents plan to one day tell their baby girl the story of her birth.
Published
2 years ago onBy
Talker News
By Lauren Beavis via SWNS
A baby was delivered by firefighters in the back of a car while they were tackling a blaze at a boatyard.
Parents Alice Hearle and Josh Beardmore, knew they wouldn't make it to hospital in time so pulled over at a spot they knew fire crews would be after seeing local news reports.
The firefighters then sprung into action and helped Alice through her labor and welcomed newborn Olive into the world.
The couple, from Falmouth, Cornwall, say the dramatic arrival of their second child was a story their daughter will share throughout her life.
When Alice’s waters broke a couple of days before her due date, she initially went to get checked over at Royal Cornwall Hospital (Treliske).
Alice, a mobile hairdresser, said: “Everything was fine so we came home to get some rest.
“They booked us in for an induction at 4pm the next day. In the morning, not much was happening.
"I just had the odd very sporadic mild contraction.”
With it being their second child, the couple were relaxed and thought they knew what was coming.
Josh said: “We chilled out, went for a walk along the seafront and got a grilled cheese.
“At about 1pm Alice phoned the midwives.
"Everything was fine so they said to stick to the plan.”
But just minutes later, Alice’s labor progressed rapidly, as she said: “Five minutes after I got off the phone with her, I had this secondary water break.
“I was getting contractions every minute. I couldn’t walk, couldn’t talk.
“In hindsight, we should have just stayed at home because we wouldn’t have made it anywhere.”

Josh added: “We were in the car and had just got down the road when Alice said ‘I’ve got to push, the baby’s coming’.”
Realizing they wouldn’t make it to Truro in time, Josh, who is used to dealing with emergency situations from his long service as an RNLI lifeboat volunteer, quickly thought of a plan B.
He said: “I knew about the fire at Cockwells because the road had been closed and I had seen all the news reports.
"I had been keeping an eye on it in case we had to go a different way to the hospital.
“I knew the fire brigade would more than likely be down there.
"When the ambulance service told me to pull over I thought ‘I know exactly where I can go’.
“I waved over at the guys and said ‘I think I need a bit of a hand here, my Mrs is having a baby’.”
Falmouth Blue Watch and Fire Investigation teams, who were dealing with the closing stages of a fire, immediately sprang into action, and Josh said 'they were amazing'.
He explained: "They dropped everything.
"The two girls were straight in the car and said ‘you look after Alice and we’ll deal with the baby’.”

The crew moved a fire engine in front of the car to block the view from the road while firefighter Katie Hoskins took charge of the delivery and her colleague, Rosie Tonkin, stayed on the phone with the ambulance service.
Alice said: “If they were nervous, they didn’t show it at all.
"They were so comforting and took control of the situation.
“I didn’t have time to be worried. I was just in the zone, I wasn’t really thinking.
“After about three pushes, the baby was out and she cried straight away so I knew she was okay.”
In such memorable circumstances, Baby Olive was born safe and well at 2.36pm on Thursday, May 16.
A few weeks later Josh and Alice took the newborn and their two-year-old son, Teddy, to thank the crews.
Alice added: “It was nice to go back and say thank you and talk about it.
“I wanted say thank you to them for being so calm and jumping in like they did.
"One of the guys even noted the exact time that she was born. Little things like that mean a lot.
“It wasn’t the water birth I had planned but I actually feel really proud and positive about the birth.”
Kath Billing, Chief Fire Officer at Cornwall Fire and Rescue Service, said: “Every day our crews go above and beyond to serve the people of Cornwall.
“I am so pleased that Olive arrived safely and I am immensely proud of the crews that helped with her delivery.
"They are a testament to the service and their profession.”
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