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"Miracle" was what the newspaper headlines declared over black-and-white photos of the blonde, blue-eyed boy clinging to a life ring before being pulled onto the Maid of the Mist tour boat, which was nearby when he bobbed to the surface at the churning base. He looks as though he's smiling
-- but he was in shock. "I'm scared absolutely to death," he says. Another photo shows him in his hospital bed, recovering from a slight concussion, scrapes and bruises. Later photos show him, hair gelled neatly to the side, posing with Captain Clifford Keech, who maneuvered the tour boat so the crew could toss a lifeline. All these years later, it's difficult to say how that moment may have affected the life of the carpenter's son who loved the outdoors. It was his first boat ride and could have been his last. Instead, Woodward developed a love of boating, became a certified diver, even joined the Navy during the Vietnam War. But you won't find him on the upper Niagara with a 7.5-horsepower motor like the one that powered Honeycutt's boat. "I'm a person of common sense and very safety-minded," he said. Woodward is drawn to stories of survival on the high seas, accounts of circumnavigating the globe, with their underlying themes about persevering through the worst nature has to offer. "I like the part of survival, the way they find a way to survive in dire circumstances," he said.
Woodward said he heard countless times that "God had his hand on you that day" or "God must have some important mission for you to accomplish in life." But it wasn't until 20 years later that the boy who had not regularly attended church was encouraged by a friend to go after finding himself troubled by nagging "Why am I here?" questions. "From that day forward I was able to answer that one huge question," he said, "and the answer to the question was this: God saved me that day, July 9, 1960, because he knew at age 27 that I would come to know him as my
Savior." It led him to the ministry for two years, but he spent most of his working life in the corporate world, in the office products and telecommunications industries. And while he kept a low profile as a Niagara Falls survivor, his three sons while growing up were quicker to exploit the story. "I was a pretty good show-and-tell piece in school," he says.
[Associated
Press;
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