Sam Marsden, five, was slowly being hanged by the 8ft-high swing in woods near his home. He had been lifted off his feet as he slipped down the banking and as he struggled, the line wound tighter around his neck.
Gasping for breath and turning blue, he managed to scream loud enough for Jennifer Nuttall, 10, and Atlanta Linning, 11, to hear and the girls raced to the rescue.
Atlanta took his weight by lifting his body up as Jennifer untangled the line.
The friends, from Darcy Lever, Bolton, then carried him home.
Sam suffered only reddening of the neck. His grateful mum Lesley Williams, 40, said he would have died without their intervention.
Lesley, who cut down the swing after hearing the news, said: "Sam was nearly hanged. He was choking with his feet off the ground and I dread to think about if the girls had not been there.
"He simply would have died. No question about it. They saved his life, without shadow of a doubt. Nothing I can say can thank them enough."
Jennifer, a pupil at Bowness Primary Atlanta, who goes to Withins High and Sam, of St Stephen and All Martyrs Primary School, all live nearby in Darcy Lever.
Sam is thought to have wandered off after playing with his sister Rio, seven, and a group of friends.
Wandered off
Lesley said: "From what I can gather Sam wandered off on his own. The next thing the two girls were carrying him up the street. My heart was in my mouth when I found out what happened.
"If they would have ran away to get help Sam would have died. I was in tears when it began to sink in."
Jennifer said: "We heard someone calling for help. I said it sounded like Sam and we followed the voice. He was dangling by his neck. Atlanta picked him up and we were both just trying to get the line off him.
"I was really, really scared and did not know what was going to happen. I just thought that I had to save him and he is one of my friends. We finally got him free.
"Everyone has been saying that we are both really clever and brave."
Atlanta said the rescue was over in a couple of minutes. She said: "It was scary. Jennifer said it sounded like Sam. I went down to the bottom of the hill and we heard it louder. We just saw him there.
"He had the rope around his neck and his feet were hovering in the air. I pulled him up by his legs and he was choking. It was right around his neck.
Struggling
"He was trying to say things but he was struggling to get his words out. We loosened it and pulled him up then we both carried him home. We are both very pleased that Sam is fine and we took him back to his mum's."
The parents of both girls today heaped praise on their 'little heroines'.
Jennifer's mum Jillian Nuttall, 33, a customer service officer at Bolton's Market Place shopping precinct, told how the girls screamed for help.
She said: "They heard a voice crying and shouting and Jennifer said it sounded like Sam. They thought he had hurt himself or fallen down the bank.
"When they arrived he was hanging by his neck underneath the swing. Jennifer said he was going blue and saying he could not breathe. Both girls screamed for help before Atlanta lifted Sam up so the weight was off his neck. Jennifer then managed to untangle the line.
"If it was not for the two girls he would have died. I am so proud of them."
Jillian said Jennifer, who is an insulin-dependent diabetic, and Atlanta, were 'attached at the hip'.
She added: "They have done a remarkable thing. Both the girls were very shaken, frightened and upset. I told them they should both be very proud of what they have done. They are both little heroines.
"For children so young to do this is amazing.
Atlanta's mother Caroline Linning, 32, added: "They could easily have run off to get help and Sam could have lost his life. To use their heads like they did at such a young age was brilliant.
"It does not bear thinking about what could have happened.
"I am just so very proud of them both."
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Showing comments 1 to 20 and replies | View All
Rugbygirl 2605, urmston (18/09/2008 at 08:09)
Peter Beagrie`s beagle (18/09/2008 at 09:36)
EricH, Horwich (18/09/2008 at 09:39)
Sam 1986, Stretford (18/09/2008 at 09:45)
It wasn't me, Merseyside (18/09/2008 at 11:46)
sallyg, Lancs (18/09/2008 at 12:41)
JKW, Stockport (18/09/2008 at 12:59)
Ali's Boot Boy, Alsager, Cheshire (18/09/2008 at 13:16)
JTC Formerley JimC (18/09/2008 at 13:23)
cjs73 (18/09/2008 at 15:21)
Rochdale Lass (18/09/2008 at 15:36)
Donald Judge (18/09/2008 at 19:25)
Teacher, Stockport
Nemo (18/09/2008 at 23:24)
Barbara Cunningham, Atlanta, Georgia, USA (18/09/2008 at 23:42)
LogicalLion (18/09/2008 at 23:48)
If you allow them to play out you have to give them strict boundaries & enforced consequences if they cross those boundaries.
Given his mothers age it was probably 'the norm' to allow the kids out at that age & expect the older kids to look after them, when she was young. This is a scary but thankfully lucky story & I doubt that his mum will be letting him wander too far again. And i would imagine that Sam has learnt an important lesson from this too.
It wasn't me, Merseyside (19/09/2008 at 00:34)
Jo's Blue Moon, Manchester (19/09/2008 at 09:08)
jenny nuttall (13/07/2011 at 12:43)
jenny nuttall (13/07/2011 at 12:43)
jenny nuttall (13/07/2011 at 12:43)