A hero tree surgeon who pulled a woman from the wreckage of a burning car was among those to receive honours at Buckingham Palace today.
Luke Ridley, from Amesbury in Wiltshire, was awarded the Queen’s Gallantry Medal for rescuing the woman after her vehicle flipped onto its side following an accident on the A303 close to his home town.
The 30-year-old managed to cut the driver free from her seatbelt by climbing in through the boot of the Nissan Micra as the police tried to give him instructions over the phone in November 2018.
Mr Ridley used his pick axe and handsaw, which are part of his working tool kit, to free the woman.
Speaking after receiving his award from the Prince of Wales on Wednesday morning, he said: “I managed to get in through the boot, sliced the seatbelt and really luckily she was able to stand up on her own and I just grabbed her and dragged her out.”
Mr Ridley said he had taken the woman to his van and immediately driven off for fear the burning car might explode.
“It was on fire as I was pulling her out and when the police turned up they were obviously really shocked at the state of the car – it was a huge blaze,” he said.
Describing his day at the palace, he said “it’s still completely surreal”, and he joked that the fire service had tried to recruit him as a volunteer firefighter, but said he is going to stick with his day job.
Elsewhere, Sir Clive Jones, former chair of the Disaster Emergencies Committee, officially collected his knighthood.
Sir Clive, who is now chair of the board of trustees of international eyecare charity Sightsavers, said his greatest concerns for the future of humanitarian work is global political unrest and the threat of climate change.
But he said he saw hope in the growing movement of young people trying to bring about change.
“I think there are two great challenges facing us – one is climate change because of the frequency of disasters which is ever going up, and the other is the degree of uncertainty and unrest all across the world.
“We live in very exciting times, very uncertain times.”
But he added: “I think younger people are determined to make the necessary changes – Greta Thunberg and her like might well provide the salvation we need.
“In my experience we live in a very generous and thoughtful country. So hopefully we can rise to the challenge.”
Mental health campaigner Matilda MacAttram, who founded the charity Black Mental Health UK, was recognised for her work tackling mental healthcare inequality in the black community.
She praised the younger generations of the royal family for their work raising awareness of mental health.
Ms MacAttram, who was awarded an OBE, told the PA news agency: “It is extremely encouraging to see people in positions of power who need not acknowledge something like this because it changes the whole debate – it changes the landscape completely.
“Having someone like a member of the royal family articulating this is speaking for the voiceless – someone having their dinner and seeing a member of the royals talking about this on prime time TV is incredible.”
After 14 years at the helm of her charity, Ms MacAttram is stepping back and is considering developing lines of accessories drawing inspiration from the traditional kente fabrics of Ghana.
She had accessorised her white polka dot dress with her own handmade kente fascinator, handbag and shoes.
“It’s something that’s creative and fun, something that’s good for my mental health and wellbeing,” she said.
Charlie Pericleous picked up an MBE for his work with Portsmouth Council and the Home Office tackling extremism among vulnerable young people and adults.
He said social isolation and online grooming are among the biggest risk factors for young people and that one of the most effective strategies for rehabilitation is to channel their energy into different activities.
Mr Pericleous said he was encouraged by the wider understanding of grooming “whether it be sexual abuse, knife crime or extremism” and the new focus on prevention rather than criminalisation of individuals.
Also among those to receive awards were Theresa May’s controversial former chief of staff, Nick Timothy, who was one of the architects of her disastrous 2017 election campaign.
He was the brains behind the former prime minister’s social care policy which was swiftly dubbed the “dementia tax”.
Mr Timothy, who declined to speak to the press, was awarded a CBE alongside Fiona Hill with whom he shared the chief of staff role.
After collecting her award in January, Ms Hill described her time in Downing Street as “bloody hard”.
MP for Great Yarmouth and Home Office minister Brandon Lewis was also awarded a CBE.
Comments & Moderation
Readers’ comments: You are personally liable for the content of any comments you upload to this website, so please act responsibly. We do not pre-moderate or monitor readers’ comments appearing on our websites, but we do post-moderate in response to complaints we receive or otherwise when a potential problem comes to our attention. You can make a complaint by using the ‘report this post’ link . We may then apply our discretion under the user terms to amend or delete comments.
Post moderation is undertaken full-time 9am-6pm on weekdays, and on a part-time basis outwith those hours.
Read the rules here