
Read
the story of Billy Weeks, who risked his roadster and his
life to save settlers from fire. In 1922, cars were precious
commodities in the new settlements of Northern Ontario.
They call him Billie
Weeks - this indomitable
young man who, in two furious hours, dashed madly along the
flame-swept road between Englehart and Charlton in his fire-scorched
Gray-Dort Roadster-making the perilous journey ten times,
and thereby saving one hundred and fifty settlers’ lives.
Billie
Weeks is a road inspector. On
the morning of the disaster he set out to examine some work
and beyond Charlton he met the fire. He turned and dashed
eastward, the flames in hot pursuit. Nobly responding, his
car reached a forty-eight mile an hour clip, yet the wind
behind swept his own dust past him.
His Car in Flames
At Charlton, the
flames overtook him, set
fire to his car and the village. Smothering his car, he telephoned
a warning to Englehart, then loaded his Gray-Dort with children.
A few minutes later he crashed into Englehart, himself blistered,
his car sizzling and running on the rims, yet doing its heroic
work like a thoroughbred.
Covering his face
and arms with vaseline and
padding the hood of his sadly battered car, he deliberately
headed back into the flame-licked road to Charlton. Ten times
he drove down and back on a road swept on each side by flaming
bush in smoke-choked blackness, searching out panic-stricken
refugees, piling them sixteen at a time, rushing them with
madly racing engine on bare rims to safety.
Honour Him and
His Gray-Dort
For the next few
days Billy Weeks did herculean work repairing
roads and burned culverts. And as the truth became known,
it was found that one hundred fifty people owed their lives
to Billie Weeks and his sturdy roadster.
“How the Hero of Englehart Saved 150 Settlers’
Lives With His Gray-Dort Roadster.” Toronto Star, October
9, 1922.
Photo Credit:
Toronto Star [Billy Weeks and
his Gray-Dort Roadster]
|