A man died yesterday as his wife battled to save him when both their cars skidded off a bridlepath into an icy river.
David
and Ruth Cox were driving their children to separate schools when their
vehicles flipped over and plunged into the water moments apart.
Mrs
Cox, 39, and both children, Ioan, nine, and Tess, 11, freed themselves
from the vehicles and swam to the bank, but Mr Cox was said to have been
unconscious in the front of his blue Toyota Aygo.
Witnesses told how Ioan ran
three-quarters of a mile back down the path to tell neighbours ‘Daddy’s
trapped’, while Tess ran back and forth twice to get help.
Neighbours and Mrs Cox frantically tried to free Mr Cox, 42, but it was
around 40 minutes before he was carried to the riverbank.
A lack of
mobile phone signal in the area and the icy conditions meant emergency
services arrived 30 minutes after the cars left the road.
Last night, both the Aygo and the second vehicle, a silver Toyota Rav4,
could be seen upturned side by side in the River Wye half-a-mile from
the family’s cottage at Blackwell Mill, near Buxton, Derbyshire.

Neighbour Victoria Bamber, 32, who was the first person alerted to the
accident by Ioan, waded into the icy water and battled in vain to save
Mr Cox.
She said: ‘Ioan came banging on the door saying, “There’s been an
accident, Daddy is trapped”.
'When I got to the scene I could only see
the silver 4x4 upside down in the water and Ruth was desperately trying
to find David. I jumped in the water. It was freezing cold and came
above my waist. I kept diving down but I could not see anything.
‘The 4x4 had landed up against the driver’s door (of the Aygo) so David
couldn’t get out. The rear window was smashed and I think that was how
Tess had managed to get out of the car.
'We were trying to get in through
the passenger door but we couldn’t move it. Then I picked up a large
rock and smashed the window. The electrics gave out and the central
locking failed and we got the door open.’

She said she helped drag Mr
Cox from the car, before the emergency services began CPR on the
riverside.
The family were airlifted to Stepping Hill Hospital in Stockport, 20
miles away, but while the mother and children were released after
treatment, Mr Cox could not be saved.
Mrs Bamber said she was in ‘total shock’ at what had unfolded. ‘I can’t
imagine what Ruth is feeling right now. She did everything she could.
She did her best to get David out.
‘Now I’m left thinking I let her and the children down. I did my best but it was not enough.’
The slow flowing river was about 3ft deep at the accident scene. Locals
described the condition of the track as appalling, with ice on top of
frozen snow.
The family only moved in to the £250,000 property a year
ago.
Caitlin Blake, a former neighbour of the couple, from Alton, Hampshire, described Mr Cox as a 'lovely man'.
The
33-year-old said: 'David and Ruth were so close. When they lived here
they were very private and spent nearly all of their time together.
David was always a loving father.'
Another former neighbour added: 'David was very family orientated and spent a lot of his time with his children.
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