Current:Home > NewsA 94-year-old was lying in the cold for hours: How his newspaper delivery saved his life -MoneySpot
A 94-year-old was lying in the cold for hours: How his newspaper delivery saved his life
View
Date:2025-04-24 09:31:09
In the heart of a mid-January deep freeze, an eastern Indiana newspaper employee was determined to deliver her papers on time.
It turned out to be in the nick of time for a 94-year-old man who did the same job himself as a boy.
Heidi Lipscomb, a distribution manager for Gannett Co. Inc. in Richmond, Indiana, was filling in for a delivery driver whose car wouldn't start in the bitter cold.
It was 2 degrees at 2 a.m. on a Tuesday morning when Lipscomb pulled into the driveway of Bill Denny’s home to drop off the Richmond Palladium-Item and Indianapolis Star. She immediately noticed the garage door was open and the lights in the house were on.
When Lipscomb stepped from the car, she told the IndyStar later, she saw Denny lying on his back in front of the garage. He wore a brown down coat, boots and brown cap and was immobile except for slight movements of his arms. His eyes were open but he couldn’t speak. His hands were black and his knuckles oozed blood.
“I was shocked to come upon this,” said Lipscomb, a Gannett employee of 25 years who often fills in for absent carriers (Gannett is the parent company of the Indianapolis Star and USA TODAY). “I told him, 'I’m getting you some help.'”
Paramedics came in five minutes and rushed Denny to a nearby hospital. Lipscomb finished delivering papers.
'I'm very fortunate'
Hours later, Lipscomb checked in at the hospital. Not only was Denny OK, but he could see visitors. He’d suffered frostbite on his hands but otherwise was in good health. Another 30 minutes in the cold, however, could have been deadly.
“I couldn’t believe it,” she said. “All I could think was, ‘Thank God he’s alive.’ He must be one tough bird.”
The least she could do, Lipscomb thought, was bring Denny his newspapers. He’d been a subscriber for 60 years, after all.
When she walked into hospital room 508 and told Denny who she was, he and his visitors declared a mystery solved.
“The final piece of the puzzle,” Denny's niece, Debbie Doggett, 72, said. ”She kept him alive.”
Denny said he was returning home from dinner at 7:30 p.m. Monday when he lost his balance, fell over and was knocked unconscious. He had no recollection of lying in the cold or seeing Lipscomb come to help.
“I must have hit my head, and when I woke up I didn’t know where I was,” Denny said from his hospital room. “I'm very fortunate Heidi was there to get the ambulance called. I never had a close call like that, not even the war.”
Denny, who worked as a mechanical engineer at Belden Wire & Cable in Richmond for 35 years, served in the Korean War as a helicopter mechanic. His wife of 51 years, Hilda Marie Denny, died at age 95 in 2016.
Denny said he delivered papers as a boy and his brother George “Dick” Denny was a sportswriter for the Indianapolis News for 30 years. Doggett’s father, John Smith, worked at the Palladium-Item for 40 years in the composing room and public relations.
Subscriber marks his 95th birthday
Friend Barry Bussen said Denny has always been resilient, and even in his 90s he still drives his late-model van to the local VFW post every day − sometimes twice − to eat and visit friends.
It didn’t surprise him that Denny made it through his “little ordeal” relatively unscathed, Bussen said. He will go through physical and occupational therapy to regain circulation to his hands.
“He’s stubborn, I’ll say that, and very sharp for his age,” Bussen, 80, said. “After 12 hours he wanted to go home from the hospital."
He recently celebrated his 95th birthday, but that was secondary, his friend said.
“We’ve just been celebrating that he made it through this.”
John Tuohy can be reached at [email protected]. Follow him on Facebook and X/Twitter.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- The Nobel Peace Prize is to be announced in Oslo. The laureate is picked from more than 350 nominees
- 73-year-old woman attacked by bear near US-Canada border, officials say; park site closed
- Tropical Storm Philippe drenches Bermuda en route to Atlantic Canada and New England
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- 73-year-old woman attacked by bear near US-Canada border, officials say; park site closed
- Not Girl Scout cookies! Inflation has come for one of America's favorite treats
- Taiwan probes firms suspected of selling chip equipment to China’s Huawei despite US sanctions
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Drake's new album 'For All the Dogs' has arrived: See the track list, cover art by son Adonis
Ranking
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Palestinians march at youth’s funeral procession after settler rampage in flashpoint West Bank town
- Economic spotlight turns to US jobs data as markets are roiled by high rates and uncertainties
- 18 migrants killed, and 27 injured in a bus crash in southern Mexico
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Icy flood that killed at least 41 in India’s northeast was feared for years
- 'This Book Is Banned' introduces little kids to a big topic
- Giraffe poop seized at Minnesota airport from woman planning to make necklace out of it
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Ranking MLB's eight remaining playoff teams: Who's got the best World Series shot?
Security questions swirl at the Wisconsin Capitol after armed man sought governor twice in one day
Fire sweeps through a 6-story residential building in Mumbai, killing 6 and injuring dozens
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
Pennsylvania’s Democratic governor, a rising political star, crosses partisan school choice divide
Arnold Schwarzenegger has one main guiding principle: 'Be Useful'
Michigan judge to decide whether to drop charges against 2 accused in false elector scheme