A WINDOW cleaner died after falling from a roof on his weekly round. Bill Wilson was found on a patio with head injuries, after he fell just 10ft from a bay window at a house in Ilkeston. A neighbour raised the alarm after hearing the 58-year-old calling for help. Paramedics took him to Nottingham's Queen's Medical Centre where he later died while undergoing surgery. An inquest has been opened but Mr Wilson's wife, Terry, says she fears she may never discover what caused her husband's fall. The 54-year-old said: "He had fallen four times before but it was nothing serious. He was careful and he could not work on certain days because of the weather.
"You can get into trouble by over-reaching and UPVC frames can be slippery. I think it was windy that day and that may have had something to do with it, but I don't think we will ever know. "Bill was a lovely man who never had a bad word to say about anyone. "He loved his family, his DIY and he loved going walking. "The pair of us often walked in the Peak District and his favourite place was Chatsworth. The accident happened last Tuesday as Mr Wilson, who had a weekly round in Ilkeston since 1991, was cleaning the windows of a house in Audley Close. He was discovered on the patio by Sharon Caulfield, who heard him calling for help. Mrs Caulfield, 45, said: "I went out into the garden and could hear this voice saying 'help me, help me'. "So I raced next door, where I could see a man lying on his side. "I called for a neighbour to call 999 and went round to see him. "He was drifting in and out of consciousness." Mrs Caulfield, who is a supervisor at St Thomas Catholic School, Ilkeston, put a towel beside his injured head and stayed with him until paramedics arrived. Doctors at the Queen's Medical Centre found he had a blood clot. He died during an operation. Mr Wilson, whose round was mainly concentrated in the Shipley View estate, was a popular figure among his customers for his reliability and diligence.
One customer, Margaret Fairlie, 82, of Manners Road, Ilkeston, said: "He was a lovely man. "He was a very good window cleaner and a pleasant fellow. "You knew that he would always be here when he said he would be, unless the weather was very bad. "We would chat about his family and his holidays. We often had a bit of banter." Neighbour Hazel Straw, 70, said: "He did a very good job and it is very sad to hear this." Mr Wilson lived with his wife in Hucknall, Nottinghamshire, and had four children – Ben 21, Ruth, 27, Vikki, 34, and 36-year-old Ruth. He had been a fitter working on the surface at Linby Colliery, in Nottinghamshire. When the colliery closed, he decided to go into window cleaning because of his love of the outdoors. Ilkeston was his biggest window-cleaning round but he also had rounds in Eastwood, Hucknall and Sutton-in-Ashfield. Mr Wilson will be cremated after a private service. On Saturday, there will be a memorial service at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses on Beauvale Road, Hucknall, at 2pm. The Health and Safety Executive has begun an investigation into Mr Wilson's death.
HSE officials have confirmed that three people died and a further 374 people had been seriously injured in the East Midlands, between 2001 and 2005, as a result of falling from ladders.
An inquest has also opened.
"You can get into trouble by over-reaching and UPVC frames can be slippery. I think it was windy that day and that may have had something to do with it, but I don't think we will ever know. "Bill was a lovely man who never had a bad word to say about anyone. "He loved his family, his DIY and he loved going walking. "The pair of us often walked in the Peak District and his favourite place was Chatsworth. The accident happened last Tuesday as Mr Wilson, who had a weekly round in Ilkeston since 1991, was cleaning the windows of a house in Audley Close. He was discovered on the patio by Sharon Caulfield, who heard him calling for help. Mrs Caulfield, 45, said: "I went out into the garden and could hear this voice saying 'help me, help me'. "So I raced next door, where I could see a man lying on his side. "I called for a neighbour to call 999 and went round to see him. "He was drifting in and out of consciousness." Mrs Caulfield, who is a supervisor at St Thomas Catholic School, Ilkeston, put a towel beside his injured head and stayed with him until paramedics arrived. Doctors at the Queen's Medical Centre found he had a blood clot. He died during an operation. Mr Wilson, whose round was mainly concentrated in the Shipley View estate, was a popular figure among his customers for his reliability and diligence.
One customer, Margaret Fairlie, 82, of Manners Road, Ilkeston, said: "He was a lovely man. "He was a very good window cleaner and a pleasant fellow. "You knew that he would always be here when he said he would be, unless the weather was very bad. "We would chat about his family and his holidays. We often had a bit of banter." Neighbour Hazel Straw, 70, said: "He did a very good job and it is very sad to hear this." Mr Wilson lived with his wife in Hucknall, Nottinghamshire, and had four children – Ben 21, Ruth, 27, Vikki, 34, and 36-year-old Ruth. He had been a fitter working on the surface at Linby Colliery, in Nottinghamshire. When the colliery closed, he decided to go into window cleaning because of his love of the outdoors. Ilkeston was his biggest window-cleaning round but he also had rounds in Eastwood, Hucknall and Sutton-in-Ashfield. Mr Wilson will be cremated after a private service. On Saturday, there will be a memorial service at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Witnesses on Beauvale Road, Hucknall, at 2pm. The Health and Safety Executive has begun an investigation into Mr Wilson's death.
HSE officials have confirmed that three people died and a further 374 people had been seriously injured in the East Midlands, between 2001 and 2005, as a result of falling from ladders.
An inquest has also opened.
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