May 17, 2010 9:43 PM

Heroic Skydiving Instructor Saves Life

By
Steve Hartman
(CBS)  Updated 5/17/10 8:25pm

Thank you for your generous response to this story. After our story aired last week, nearly $40,000 has been raised to help pay Dave Hartsock's medical bills.


Sorting junk mail day after day -- driving the same rural mail route week after week -- you can understand why Shirley Dygert of Teague, Texas, thought she could use a little exhilaration for a change.

For her 54th birthday, the grandmother of three decided to send herself airmail - by jumping out of a plane from 13,000 feet. CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman reports Dygert was strapped to her instructor in what's called a tandem jump.

In video taken before the jump, Dygert is seen with her instructor and soon to be hero: Dave Hartsock.

Make a Donation to Dave Hartsock

There isn't any video of what happened next, just still photos. Their first parachute opened, but only partially -- and their reserve chute just got tangled-up with the first one.

"And I thought, huh, this is how I'm going to die," Dygert said. "I thought God please help us, God please help Dave and we just continued to spiral."

At 40 mph and 500 feet from the ground, Hartsock did the truly unimaginable. Just before crashing, he told Shirley to lift up her feet. He then pulled down the control toggles to rotate their position to put his body under hers to act as a cushion so that when they hit, he would take the brunt of the fall.

"I can't hardly believe it," Dygert said. "He broke my fall."

Hartsock didn't die, but his valor cost him dearly. He's now paralyzed with just a little movement in his right arm.

"People keep telling me that it was a heroic thing to do," Hartsock said. "In my opinion it was just the right thing to do. I mean, I was the one who was completely responsible for her safety. What other choices were there?"

"You hear heroes say that, don't you?" Dygert said. "It's just because that's the kind of person they are."

We were with them the first time they saw each other since the accident. Although she came to hospital to cheer him up, it turned out the other way around. Hartsock had her laughing, and even invited her skydiving again.

"We're accident-proof now, baby. I mean what are the odds of something like that happening twice like that?"

He's planning on it someday.

Hartsock has a long road ahead - although some feeling is already coming back. Plus, he's got his mom taking care of him and she's got his same spirit.

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 23 Comments
by museumofhistoryingranite August 31, 2010 11:12 AM EDT
The Hall of Fame of Parachuting (www.historyingranite.org) is pleased and honored to announce the decision of the Trustees to engrave in granite the name of David Hartsock as one of the two annual awardees for the year 2011. The date of the ceremony will be announced at year end 2010. Information is seen at www.historyingranite.org
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by dka10 May 21, 2010 7:54 AM EDT
Dave, Just want you to know I always heard everything was
bigger and better in Texas ! Guess that means the spirit of their men too. You are going to be tired of being called a hero, but if the shoe fits ! God bless from North Dakota.
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by storyofcory May 19, 2010 4:15 PM EDT
I am humbled. I am touched. I am amazed. You don't run across people like Dave too much in this day and age. Dave, you may consider what you did to just be what "should" have been done, and maybe it WAS the right thing to do, but that doesn't mean that you are any less a hero in my book. May God bless you and continue to watch over you and protect you. I sincerely hope you are able to regain as much use of your body as is humanly possible, because no one should have to live the life you're living right now because they did what you did.
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by meetball1 May 13, 2010 10:27 AM EDT
Dave, what a heroic measure you took!!!!

She is single, you are single, I'm just saying.
I would love the person that saved my life as much as I loved myself, think about it.
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by rosabudd May 11, 2010 8:07 AM EDT
God Bless You-Dave; your quick thinking saved someone's life.
Maybe it will be "payed forward"someday.

Hoping for a quick recovery=
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by alive357 May 11, 2010 3:50 AM EDT
As a former Paratrooper with 101st(Airborne Division) they must of had whats called a Mae West cause if they had what's called Streamer, they have been going at least 3 times the speed of(40 MPH) the news report,Guy's a True Hero and it just wasn't their time to go from this earth!!! God Bless him and her in the name of Jesus,Budda,Ali or whatever your choice of Deity be!!!
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by mick7744 May 11, 2010 1:51 AM EDT
Daveisright! As the instructor, he was completly responsible for his student's saftey.

He did the right thing.

Knowing the right thing to do is relativley easy...doing it is something much, much harder.

All good things to this genuine hero!
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by notparicular May 11, 2010 1:23 AM EDT
Dave is God's own messenger. Be well Dave, soon.
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by rwsmith29456 May 11, 2010 12:46 AM EDT
"I was the one who was completely responsible for her safety." If more people just had just 1% of his guts the world would be a much better place.
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by KHLady7 May 10, 2010 11:14 PM EDT
Dave, thank the Lord for people like you. You're a true hero.
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