Bronx boy scout honored for saving elderly neighbor and toddler from apartment fire
Jack Dailey, 17, of Riverdale's Troop 240, steered Marion Lawrence, 74, and 1-year-old Jake Garrett through smoke-filled hallways to a fire escape.
BY BEN KOCHMAN
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Tuesday, October 21, 2014, 9:09 PM
Eagle Scout Jack Dailey of Troop 240 used his eagle eyes to help an elderly great grandmother and young child escape from a Riverdale apartment in January.
This scout has eagle eyes for danger.
A 17-year-old heroic Bronx boy scout was awarded the greatest honor the Boy Scouts can bestow after he raced into a burning apartment building in January to save his elderly neighbor and a toddler.
“I just did the only thing that made sense,” said Jack Dailey of Troop 240 in Riverdale. “I didn’t really think about should I do this or shouldn’t I. I just did it.”
The brave boy scout steered Marion Lawrence, 74, and 1-year-old Jake Garrett through smoke-filled hallways to a fire escape.
He said he smelled smoke when he returned home to the seventh and highest floor of his brick apartment building at W. 240th St. near Waldo Ave. on Jan. 30.
The source of the fire came from apartment 7D, where Lawrence was baby-sitting little Jake.
The great-grandmother, holding the child in her arms, swung open the door as smoke billowed out of the bedroom.
She handed Jack the baby — and then they high-tailed it to another apartment, where the boy scout called 911 with one hand, while cradling the tot in the other, he recalled.
He pushed a dresser out of the way and calmly led his neighbors to safety out the window to a fire escape.
“I was the only person there who did not freak out completely,” Jack told the Daily News on Tuesday, between his classes and cross country practice.
“Just getting out was the only thing on my mind,” the Archbishop Stepinac High School senior added.
Dailey received the Honor Medal with Crossed Palms -- the Boy Scouts’ highest honor – at a ceremony with fellow scouts on Oct. 16.
Firefighters retrieved them around an hour later, when the blaze was under control, the FDNY said.
The New York City Scouts and the National Court of Honor gave the cherubic high schooler the coveted Honor Medal with Crossed Palms during an Oct. 16 award ceremony.
He has also since risen the ranks to Eagle Scout — the highest rank a boy scout can attain.
The quick-thinking teenager’s troop leader said he wasn’t surprised to hear of Jack’s good deed.
“That’s absolutely what Jack would do,” said Avi Rubenstein, who has served as Troop 240’s scout master for the past five years. “He’s so calm under pressure, it’s not funny.”
The rescued tot and his family have since moved out of the apartment, which was gutted by flames, according to the toddler’s father, Sean Garrett.
“I couldn’t express enough how grateful we were (to Jack),” Garrett said.
The young hero is hoping to one day join the city’s Police Department instead of suiting up as a firefighter, despite the heroics.
“My mom doesn’t want me to be a fireman because it’s too dangerous,” he said.