Hannah, dog who survived crash, doing fine and making friends

CORNWALL — It was one of the most badly mangled vehicles firefighter Jim Vanicky had ever seen. The pickup truck had rolled onto its side and caught fire after a head-on collision on Route 63 late on the afternoon of Jan. 7.

Inside the vehicle, firefighters saw an injured and badly frightened golden retriever mix. She snapped at the rescue workers who tried to help her.

Her owner, 65-year-old James Stack, had already been extricated from the truck and was being rushed to a waiting LifeStar helicopter.

He died a short time later at Hartford Hospital. Among his last words was a plea for someone to take care of his dog, Hannah.

Hannah was bleeding and it was apparent she needed medical attention. Firefighter and Animal Control Officer Rick Stone, nicknamed “the dog whisperer,� was able to get Hannah to calm down, submit to an exam and allow herself to be secured with a backboard and neckbrace just as a human would be.

Emergency vet care

Radio transmissions by emergency workers that day included chilling calls for extrication equipment and the need to establish a helicopter landing zone,  and one very unusual request for information: Where was the nearest emergency animal hospital?

The answer: none in this immediate area. (There will be a story on emergency animal care options in the Feb. 25 edition of The Lakeville Journal.)

The closest was Farmington Valley Veterinary Hospital in Avon. Two firefighters drove Hannah there, and waited while her injuries — cuts and bruises, as it turned out — were treated. They brought the normally good-natured 9-year-old back to Cornwall, and back into Stone’s care. Stone is also the Highway Department foreman, and has established accommodations for dogs at the Town Garage.

“She’s a sweet dog and she seems to be doing just fine now,� Stone said.

It has become apparent that “fine,� for Hannah, means becoming an honorary town crew member.

She sleeps in Stone’s office (“I decided not to take her to the pound because it’s too noisy, and she was pretty traumatized,� he said) and will happily spend the entire day riding shotgun in the town crew trucks, Vanicky said.

“She was out plowing with me at 2:30 a.m. during the snowstorm,� he said. “We’ve nicknamed her ‘The Supervisor.’�

Hannah’s story has thrown Cornwall into the media spotlight. She even appeared with her “co-workers� on a television news broadcast last week.

Plans are for Stack’s daughter to pick Hannah up at some point after the funeral, and bring her back to her Shelton home.

From there, arrangements will be made for a permanent home, which doesn’t appear to be an issue.

“Everyone on the crew, and others who come by on their way to the dump, have offered to take her,� Vanicky said. “We’re going to be very sorry to see her go.�

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