Shropshire Star

Police officer reunited with Manchester bomb victim she drove to hospital

Manchester: 100 Days After The Attack tells the story of some those directly affected by the arena terror attack.

Published
Last updated
Manchester Arena bombing victim Lilly Harrison as she is reunited with Pc Cath Daley as part of ITV's documentary Manchester: 100 Days After the Attack (ITV)

A police officer has been reunited with an eight-year-old girl she drove to hospital in the wake of the Manchester Arena bombing.

Lily Harrison suffered a shrapnel wound and a bruised lung after being thrown to the floor by the suicide bomb blast at the end of the Ariane Grande concert on May 22 which killed 22 people and injured dozens more.

Her parents, Adam Harrison and Lauren Thorpe, from Heaton Moor, Stockport, were also injured with the latter having to undergo three operations in just seven days after sustaining leg injuries.

Ms Thorpe says at one stage she thought her daughter was dead as she fell in and out of consciousness and appeared to stop breathing.

As terrified concert-goers tried to escape the venue, Pc Cath Daley and a colleague ran towards the scene and spotted Lily’s parents crouched around their unconscious daughter.

Pc Daley, who has served as a police officer for 25 years, decided they could not wait for an ambulance so she drove the family to hospital in her police van.

After she dropped them off and warned medics that an influx of casualties were on the way, the officer raced back to the scene to tend to more of the injured from the blast and later joined search teams to ensure another bomb had not been left.

Manchester Arena bombing victim Lily Harrison as she is reunited with Pc Cath Daley as part of ITV's documentary Manchester: 100 Days After the Attack.
Manchester Arena bombing victim Lily Harrison as she is reunited with Pc Cath Daley (ITV/PA)

As part of ITV documentary Manchester: 100 Days After the Attack, Pc Daley was reunited with Lily and her mother for the first time since the explosion.

Ms Thorpe told the officer: “We’re just really grateful because without you… it could have been a completely different situation. I know you just say you were just doing your job but we just don’t know how to say thank you enough.”

Others featured in the programme include Charlotte Campbell, the mother of 15-year-old Olivia Campbell-Hardy, tells how she has asked her daughter’s best friend, Adam Lawler, 15, to give her away at her wedding to fiance Paul Hodgson in November.

Charlotte Campbell and Paul Hodgson, the mother and stepfather of Olivia Campbell-Hardy
Charlotte Campbell and Paul Hodgson, the mother and stepfather of Olivia Campbell-Hardy (David Wilcock/PA)

She said: “She adored Adam, she was his best friend, she did think the world of him.

“He’s my little hero. He gave my little girl the best night of her life, and I’ll never ever stop thanking him for that.

“I’ve got that much admiration for the lad that I’ve even asked him to give me away at the wedding.”

Adam Lawler (Danny Lawson/PA)
Adam Lawler was injured in the attack (Danny Lawson/PA)

Adam said: “I want to live my life as Liv would’ve done. Be kind, be good, be funny, be brilliant, so that’s why I say ‘Don’t go forward in anger. Love spreads’.”

: Manchester: 100 Days After The Attack is broadcast on ITV1 at 9pm tonight.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.