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Doss,
seen here at the top of Hacksaw Ridge, also called the Maeda Escarpment, dragged
75 severely wounded men to the edge of the ridge and lowered them down a 35
foot high cliff overhang to safety below, where they could be treated by other medics. To rescue the soldiers, he used a knot that
he had learned as a youth, when as a Seventh day Adventist’s Pathfinder, he
helped to rescue West Virginia flood victims.
Private Doss made a “life basket” using a “bowline-on-a-bight” knot, with a “chest safety hitch”, instead of a standard single “bowline”. Do you know how to make a life basket? You should because someday someone’s life might depend on it.
First
make a loop, a bight, by folding the tail of the rope back on itself so that
the loop extends from one hand under your feet and back to your other
hand. The easiest way for me to remember
how to tie a bowline, with either a single or doubled strand, is the “rabbit
and tree” method.
· Make
a loop a foot or two from the end of the loop to form the RABBITHOLE.
· The
rabbit comes UP through the hole.
· The
rabbit goes AROUND the tree.
· The
rabbit goes back DOWN through the hole.
Once
you have tied a bowline-on-a-bight, slide the loops up over the victim’s legs
and tie the chest safety hitch around their upper torso.
· To tie a chest safety hitch, form a half hitch around the chest by looping the standing end of the line under the right arm, around the back and under the left arm, before passing it under and then over portion going under the right arm. The tail end of the line is “c” of Figure 18 below.
Today
the life basket is commonly taught to rescue personnel, firefighters and other
workers who routinely work high up on trees or poles, it is a safe way to lower
injured and potentially unconscious victims to the ground. The best thing about the life basket is, if
you have more than one person to lower safely to the ground, it doesn’t have to
be completely retied for each victim.
The rescue personnel on the ground only need to untie the chest safety
hitch, slide the leg loops off the first victim and the rope is ready to be
hauled back up to be turned into a life basket for the next victim. And this is how eighty years ago Pfc. Desmond
T. Doss rescued at least seventy-five wounded soldiers and lowered them to
safety down the cliff face at Hacksaw Ridge.
Don’t forget to come back next week and read “Pfc. Desmond Doss and
the Rest of the Story ©”, where we will talk about the rest of Desmond Doss’s
story.
I
hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me
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That
is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!
Sources
National
WW2 Museum; “Private First Class Desmond Thomas Doss Medal of Honor”, October
12, 2020, https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/private-first-class-desmond-thomas-doss-medal-of-honor,
accessed May 10, 2025
Prefer,
Nathan N.; “Hell on Hacksaw Ridge”, August 2021, https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/hell-on-hacksaw-ridge/#:~:text=Doss%2C%20the%20only%20surviving%20aid%20man%20in,to%20GIs%20below%2C%20saving%2075%20wounded%20Americans,
accessed May 10, 2025
United States Civil
Defense; Rescue Skills and Techniques TM-14-1, [Federal Civil Defense
Administration, United States Government Printing Office, October 1957], page
21-22, https://books.google.com/books?id=JezBftEUj7EC&pg=PP3&dq=%22Rescue+Techniques+and+Operations+TM-14-1+%22&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjGkYeR45KNAxUjK1kFHQ1wIf0Q6AF6BAgJEAM#v=onepage&q=%22Rescue%20Techniques%20and%20Operations%20TM-14-1%20%22&f=false,
accessed May 10, 2025
United State Civil
Defense Office; Technical Manual: TM., Issue 14, [Federal Civil Defense
Administration, United States Government Printing Office, September 1952], page
21, https://books.google.com/books?id=LvvDCx5EwOkC&pg=PA20&dq=%22civil+defense%22+%22life+basket%22&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiVmsvW4JKNAxX0EFkFHZedL0cQ6AF6BAgJEAM#v=onepage&q=%22civil%20defense%22%20%22life%20basket%22&f=false,
accessed May 10, 2025
van Dujin, Tina, et. al; Can analogy instructions help older
people (re)learn activities of daily living?, July 2024, https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Description-of-the-bowline-knot-by-the-rabbit-analogy-Source_fig1_382735870,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia;
“Citation for PFC Desmond Doss (1944 - 1945) 10325_2006_001”, January 6, 2006, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Citatie_Desmond_Doss.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia;
“Citation for PFC Desmond Doss(1944 - 1945) 10325_2006_002”, January 6, 2006, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Citatie_2_Desmond_Doss.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia;
“Desmond Doss, on top of the Maeda Escarpment, Battle of Okinawa”, May 4, 1945,
by United States Army, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Doss_Maeda.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia; “The grave of
Desmond Doss in the Chattanooga National Cemetery”, April 24, 2011, by Fred
Bullmer, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Desmond_Doss_Grave.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia; “Doss wearing
an HBT jacket with a medic’s kit bag around his neck on Okinawa”, 1945, by United
States Army, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Desmond_Doss_in_Okinawa.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
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