Frisco, Ala. After nearly 13 tense hours, rescuers using a powerful drill and working under bright lights Monday saved a toddler trapped at the bottom of an abandoned well, bringing him out to cheers, tears and cries of "Praise the Lord!"
More than 100 people had gathered at the vacant lot, watching and praying through the night for 22-month-old Da'jour McMillian, who was playing with his older brother and sister near his grandparents' house when he disappeared down the 14-foot well that was overgrown with grass and unknown to neighbors and firefighters.
"The man who cuts the grass didn't even know about it," said firefighter Jimmy Brown.
Da'jour was hospitalized in good condition, after a night that Mayor Jim Cave said "seemed like an eternity."
Brown said when Frisco City firefighters and police arrived, they realized they needed help and called for a rescue team from Mobile with special training. An Alabama Power Co. drill was used to dig a shaft next to the one where the little boy was trapped. Rescue workers then tunneled over to the well to reach the child about 5:45 a.m.
A camera was dropped down the well to keep an eye on the boy during the rescue. The warm night helped ward off hypothermia. The main worry was that the child might not be able to breathe in the narrow hole.
"It wouldn't have taken but a little dirt on that child to suffocate him," said the mayor, who was at the site through the long night.
Brown said the child was "as happy as he could be" when he emerged from the well.
"When he came out he saw his momma, and he called out for his momma," said Tammy Howard, a cousin. "Oh, yes, it was a miracle."



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