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From the Western Daily Press on Friday the 28th of April 1905

On Wednesday afternoon a serious accident happened to a young fellow named Harry Bailey, of Malmesbury. It appears that Mr Boulton of the Greyhound Inn, Tetbury, has been accustomed to be driven in a pony and trap to Malmesbury market by his little daughter, aged 9. On starting for home from the “White Lion” yard, the little girl got into the trap alone and took hold of the reins.

The young man Bailey, thinking the pony’s bridle was not quite right, proceeded to rectify it, when, suddenly, the pony bolted, knocking Bailey down. The wheels passed over him, and he was picked up insensible. He was taken to the Cottage Hospital and attended by Dr. Pitt who found that two of his ribs were broken, besides other injuries. He is in a critical condition. Meanwhile, the pony galloped at a breakneck speed through Abbey Row and Westport, with the little girl pluckily sticking to the reins and calling out “Save me, oh, save me.”

The animal was quite beyond control and rushed around the Horsefair, eventually dashing into Mr. Sealy’s blacksmith shop, where the trap turned over and the plucky little driver was thrown into the road. Fortunately, her injuries were confined to a cut nose and forehead and a few bruises.