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Alaska man given Coast Guard medal years after girl's rescue

Alaska man receives U.S. Coast Guard's second-highest civilian honour for saving a girl from drowning when they were both children, more than 20 years ago.

In 1998, George Lambert swam out 30 metres to tow a girl to safety

Nome Magistrate Judge Pamela Smith gets a hug from her friend, George "Radar" Lambert, after Lambert was given a silver lifesaving medal in Anchorage, Alaska. Lambert saved Smith from drowning in 1998, when he was 10 and she was 12-years-old. (Loren Holmes/Anchorage Daily News via AP)

An Alaska man has received the U.S. Coast Guard's second-highest civilian honour for saving a girl from drowning when they were both children more than 20 years ago, a report said.

George Lambert received a silver lifesaving medal in Anchorage Saturday for rescuing Pamela Smith, The Anchorage Daily News reported Saturday.

The award was presented by Coast Guard Rear Admiral Matthew Bell Jr., who told the story of the rescue during a ceremony attended by Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy.

Lambert and Smith were among a group swimming at a sandbar near Kotzebue in northwest Alaska in 1998 when he was 10 and she was 12. Smith was pulled into the current, and Lambert took a life jacket and swam out 30 metres to tow Smith to safety, Bell said.

He pushed hard just to get to me, and he pushed even harder to bring me back.- Pamela Smith, Rescued by Lambert in 1998

"I just ran to the boat and grabbed a jacket, didn't even think about it, put it on, jumped in that water, went and got my friend and made it back to shore," Lambert said. "And we're here to talk about it today."

Today Lambert is a commercial fisherman, and Smith is a magistrate judge.

"He pushed hard just to get to me, and he pushed even harder to bring me back," Smith said.

Rear Adm. Matthew Bell (right) presents a silver lifesaving medal to George "Radar" Lambert (centre) on May 18. (Loren Holmes/Anchorage Daily News via AP)

Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Jonathan Dale led a three-year campaign to recognize Lambert after learning his story.

Smith was the first child on record to be saved in part because of Alaska's "Kids Don't Float" program encouraging life jacket use and swimming safety education.

The program supplied the life jacket Lambert used. Since then, at least 30 more children have been rescued because of the program, Bell said.