These 5 Hero Seeing-Eye Dogs Saved Their Human Companions’ Lives

September is National Guide Dog Month, a time to celebrate and raise awareness of the work of seeing-eye dogs and other service dogs.

Seeing-eye dogs may have existed as far back as the first century A.D., according to the Guide Dogs for the Blind Federation. A mural depicting a dog leading a man was discovered in the ruins of the ancient Roman town of Heculaneum, which was destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D.

Twenty centuries later, Guiding Eyes for the Blind estimates that there are currently about 10,000 guide dogs working in the United States.

In honor of National Guide Dog Month, here are five seeing-eye dogs that went above and beyond the line of duty by heroically saving the lives of their blind human companions.

Salty and Roselle

When the North Tower of the World Trade Center was struck by the hijacked American Airlines Flight 11 on 9/11, two seeing-eye dogs led their blind owners safely out of the building.

Michael Hingson was working on the 78th floor when the plane struck 14 stories above him. Although his 3-year-old seeing-eye dog, Roselle, was terrified of loud noises, the yellow Lab immediately sprang into action, leading Hingson to the stairwell and down 78 flights of stairs.

“Roselle wasn’t giving me any indication she was nervous,” Hingson told KSBY the week before the 20th anniversary of 9/11. “We key off each other, we feed off each other, and the very fact she wasn’t nervous at all told me that we had time to try and evacuate in an orderly way.”

A book Hingson wrote about the experience, “Thunder Dog: The True Story of a Blind Man, His Guide Dog, and the Triumph of Trust” [*affiliate link], was a bestseller. Roselle, who retired in 2007, died in 2011 of immune-mediated thrombocytopenia, a disease Hingson believes was triggered by the chemicals, debris and smoke she inhaled on 9/11.

Omar Rivera was also working in the North Tower when the plane struck. His seeing-eye dog, Salty, began running back and forth in the hallway outside Rivera’s cubicle on the 71st floor.

“I think he was trying to search out what was going on — and then he just came back to me and sat down next to me, very anxious,” Rivera told TODAY.com in 2015. “The thing I remember most about him that day was the way he tried to communicate with me to tell me, ‘This is urgent. We need to act on this immediately.’”

As they slowly descended the increasingly crowded stairwell, Rivera let go of Salty’s harness so the dog could escape, but the yellow Lab refused to leave his side. After an hour and 15 minutes, they finally made it to the ground floor. They were only a few blocks away when the tower collapsed.

Salty retired in 2007. He “played obsessively with tennis balls and exuded relentless joy” until he died at the age of 13 the following year, TODAY.com reports.

Yolanda

Maria Colon, who is blind, awoke to the smell of smoke in her Philadelphia house in August 2015.

“I said, ‘Oh my God… I can’t breathe,’” she told NBC 10.

She shouted, “Danger!” to her seeing-eye dog, Yolanda.

The golden retriever called 911.

“I hear the phone — tke, tke, tke. And she’s growling. And I said, ‘Oh my lord, she called the police,’” Colon said.

This was actually the second time Yolanda used the specially equipped phone to summon emergency services. She did the same thing last year when Colon fell and lost consciousness.

Firefighters quickly arrived and put out the blaze. Both Colon and Yolanda were treated for smoke inhalation.

“I’m her Mommy, and she loves me too much,” Colon told NBC 10.

Figo

As Audrey Stone crossed a Brewster, N.Y., street with her seeing-eye dog, Figo, on a morning in June 2015, the driver of a mini-bus didn’t see them.

But Figo sure saw the mini-bus. He leaped in front of Stone, taking the brunt of the hit.

“The dog did something really heroic,” John Del Gardo, Brewster’s police chief, told ABC News. “He sort of lunged at the bus. It injured his leg and paw, and the woman received multiple injuries. When EMS came, he didn’t want to leave her side.”

Both Stone and Figo were hospitalized for their injuries, but are expected to fully recover. A generous, anonymous benefactor covered the cost of Figo’s veterinary care.

Figo “deserves the purple heart,” Stone told the Journal News.

Orlando

Cecil Williams, who is blind, was walking too close to the edge of a Harlem subway platform in December 2013.

Witnesses told CBS New York that Williams’ seeing-eye dog, a 10-year-old black Lab named Orlando, kept barking and trying to lead him farther away.

Williams, however, ended up falling onto the subway tracks. Orlando jumped down and sat beside him, licking his face.

When a train approached, witnesses screamed for it to stop, but it was too late. Several cars ran over Williams and Orlando. Amazingly, both of them survived.

Since Orlando was about to retire, Williams was afraid he’d have to give up his hero for a new seeing-eye dog, because he couldn’t afford to care for two dogs. But thanks to donations, Orlando was able to live out his retirement with the man whose life he helped save.

“The spirit of giving, of Christmas, and all of that — it exists here,” a tearful Williams told CBS News.

Photo: Hurricane Omega

Guide Dog Terrified by Thunder Led Blind Man to Safety on 9/11

A 3-year-old guide dog named Roselle was terrified by thunder.

“When we moved to New Jersey, she was our early warning system for storms,” her dog dad, Michael Hingson, told the Los Angeles Daily News in 2015. “She would get afraid and just start shaking.”

The Labrador Retriever always accompanied Hingson, who is blind, to his computer sales job in the North Tower of the World Trade Center. She was by his side when a hijacked plane struck the tower 20 years ago today.

“We heard a muffled explosion — the building sort of shuddered,” Hingson said during an appearance on FOX Business’s “Cavuto Coast to Coast” this week. “No one had any idea what was going on, because the airplane hit 18 floors above us on the other side of the building. But clearly, we needed to evacuate.”

Although the attack was far more frightening than the loudest thunderstorm, Roselle immediately went to work, helping guide Hingson down 78 flights of stairs.

“Roselle wasn’t giving me any indication she was nervous,” Hingson told KSBY this week. “We key off each other, we feed off each other, and the very fact she wasn’t nervous at all told me that we had time to try and evacuate in an orderly way.”

“I was the pilot and she was the navigator,” Hingson told the Daily News. After all, “When Roselle was working, she’d plow through a thunderstorm without a second thought,” he said.

David Frank was with Hingson at the time of the attack. He joined Hingson and Roselle for the 45-minute descent down the stairwell.

“She had difficult moments, but she never left his side,” Frank told the Daily News. “She was getting cotton-mouth — frothing white foam — and she managed to get some water that had puddled along the way.”

Frank said he will never forget Roselle’s determined expression — or all the doomed hero firefighters who passed them climbing up the stairs.

Hingson and Roselle inspired other survivors as they made their treacherous way down the stairwell. They told him, “We saw you going down the stairs and talking to Roselle, and clearly you guys didn’t have any problem with what was going on, so we followed you down the stairs,” Hingson told KSBY.

After Hingson and Roselle finally made it outside and were running away from the tower, the South Tower collapsed.

Hingson described it as like a freight train and a waterfall. “You could hear metal flattening like a freight train, glass tinkling and breaking, and this white noise of a waterfall pancaking straight down,” he told KSBY. “With every breath I took, I could feel dirt and junk and debris going down my throat and into my lungs and settling.”

He still managed to yell commands to Roselle, who continued to help him navigate through the horrorscape.

Hingson later wrote a best-selling book about the experience, appropriately titled, “Thunder Dog: The True Story of a Blind Man, His Guide Dog, and the Triumph of Trust.” [*affiliate link]

‘We were a perfect match’

Roselle had been raised and trained by Guide Dogs for the Blind in San Rafael, Calif. Hingson was introduced to her in 1999.

“It was obvious from the very beginning that we were a perfect match,” he wrote in his blog. “Roselle was my fifth guide dog. I could tell that she would be an excellent guide from our very first walk together. What took me a few days to discover was that Roselle was also quite a character; I constantly referred to her as a pixie.”

Roselle liked to steal Hingson’s socks and then hide them somewhere, “only to bring them out later just to taunt me,” he wrote. “Her tail wagged through the whole experience. In fact, her tail hardly stop wagging during the almost 12 years I knew her.”

For 10 years after 9/11, Roselle stayed by Hingson’s side. In 2004 the hero dog was diagnosed with immune-mediated thrombocytopenia, a disease that causes a dog’s immune system to attack and destroy blood platelets. Hingson told the Daily News he believes the chemicals, debris and smoke of Sept. 11 probably triggered the disease.

Three years later, Roselle retired. In June 2011, her condition worsened, and Hingson had to make the difficult decision to end her suffering.

“I remember I told her we loved her and she was a great dog. One in a million,” he told the Daily News. He said that after 9/11, it was the most difficult day in his life.

Hingson, who regularly made speaking engagements in the years after 9/11, is not as busy these days, but he hopes that will change. He and his wife now live in Victorville, Calif., with his current guide dogs, Fantasia and Africa. He keeps Roselle’s ashes in an engraved box.

His dream is to get a construction loan to build a handicapped-accessible house with a big yard for Fantasia and Africa, and a final resting place for Roselle.

“She worked through the most trying time in our nation’s history, and she was right there, unflinching, for all of it,” Hingson wrote on his blog. “Her spirit never diminished and, in fact, grew stronger through the years after 9/11, which helps me be a better person today.”

In memory of the hero dog, Hingson has created Roselle’s Dream Foundation. The purpose of the nonprofit is to “assist blind persons to live the life they want and to dream as big as they can” by educating people about blindness and helping blind children and adults obtain technologies to help them learn and work.

You can make a donation in Roselle’s memory on the Roselle’s Dream Foundation website.

Photos via Facebook

* iStillLoveDogs.com is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program. If you click this link and buy the book, iStillLoveDogs.com will receive a small percentage of the purchase price.

These Two Blind Couples Tied the Knot Thanks to Their Guide Dogs

Claire and Mark Gaffey with guide dogs Venice and Rodd

 

Seeing-eye dogs not only help blind people navigate their environments, but they can sometimes also help them find that special someone.

Meet two couples from Florida and England who probably never would have met if their guide dogs hadn’t shown them the way to love.

Mike and Eva Truelock

Eva, who is legally blind, was having some behavior issues with her guide dog, Cara, back in 2007, so she and the Black Lab returned to Southeastern Guide Dogs, a school in Palmetto, Fla., for more training.

“They told me to bring Cara back in order to get her out of her environment, which may help her get back into shape,” Eva told The Ledger. “I told my mom I’ll come back as single as I am going, but she told me, ‘I hope you find someone.’ I just kind of dismissed that.”

But her mom’s wish was about to come true. Eva and Cara stayed at Southeastern for a week. During that short time, Eva met Mike Truelock, who was about to graduate after being trained to use his first guide dog.

Mike, who has retina pigmentosa, has been blind since he was 28. Eva was born with retina cancer and lost her eyesight at age 3.

The two met and hit it off, but then Eva returned home to Winter Haven while Mike returned to his home in Dallas. They continued to stay in touch via email.

And then one night about two months after they’d met, Mike called Eva. “This is when the relationship really began,” Eva told The Ledger.

For the next three years, Eva would fly to Dallas or Mike would fly to Winter Haven. In 2010, the two got married and settled down in Winter Haven.

Eva’s current guide dog is an energetic Black Lab named Sandy. Mike’s is Romeo, also a Black Lab, but whose calmness mellows out Sandy.

“Sandy is 6 but sometime acts like a 2-year-old dog,” Eva told The Ledger. “She is very high strung and very verbal. Romeo is less outgoing and is more cool and calm.”

It’s interesting that the guide dogs’ personalities match those of their pet parents.

“I know that Eva tends to be very outgoing and bubbly while Mike is calm, cool and collected,” Suzy Wilburn, director of admissions and graduate services at Southeastern Guide Dogs, told The Ledger.

“The two complement each other perfectly. The unique part is that their dogs have also been the yin and the other’s yang, which makes for a very happy household.”

Mark and Claire Gaffey

In March 2012, while attending a two-week residential training class in England for guide dogs and the people they’ll be assisting, Venice, a yellow Labrador Retriever belonging to Claire Johnson, fell head-over-paws in love with Rodd, also a yellow Lab, who belongs to Mark Gaffey.

The two 3-year-olds were inseparable. They “seemed to know something we didn’t,” Gaffey told the Daily Mail in July 2013. “They were always playing together and nuzzling up together.”

Gaffey and Johnson are both in their 50s. Gaffey has been blind since birth; Johnson lost her eyesight due to diabetes when she was 24. The two lived less than two miles away from each other in Stoke-on-Trent, but had never met prior to the training class.

Since their dogs got along so well, Johnson invited Gaffey out for coffee after the classes ended. Soon they began having lunch together. And then dinner. And then, 11 months after the foursome first met, Gaffey proposed to Johnson, on Valentine’s Day 2013.

“We were purely in the right place at the right time. I have never believed in fate, but it does seem like it was meant to be,” Gaffey told the Daily Mail.

He and Johnson were married in March 2014. Venice and Rodd led their happy pet parents down the aisle and served as ring bearers, according to the Guide Dogs for the Blind Association.

“I have no doubt that our guide dogs brought us together and helped me find my true love,” Johnson told the association.

“Much like our two guide dogs, we really are best friends and soul mates.”

Photo via YouTube

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