A Father of Five Lost His Entire Face on the Job. Ten Years Later, a Grieving Mother Changed Everything.
The morning of September 5, 2001, Patrick Hardison kissed his kids goodbye and drove to a house fire. He never came back looking the same.
The 27-year-old volunteer firefighter from Senatobia, Mississippi, entered the burning home searching for a woman believed to be trapped inside. The roof collapsed. The blaze consumed him. By the time he crawled out through a window, his mask had melted into his skin — and his face, as he had known it, was gone. NBC News
What happened next is one of the most remarkable medical stories in American history.
“I Said — ‘This Is It? I Can’t Do This.'”
The fire stripped Hardison of his eyelids, ears, lips, most of his nose, and all of his hair, including his eyebrows. The burns covered his entire face, scalp, neck, and upper torso. PR Newswire
He spent 63 days in the hospital. When he finally came home, he couldn’t bring himself to look in the mirror. That’s how he would live for the next 14 years. NBC News
To shield others from the sight of his injuries, Hardison wore a baseball cap, dark sunglasses, and prosthetic ears every time he left the house. But no disguise could fully prepare the world — or his children — for what they saw. “You go to the ball field, you have to prepare yourself for the kid that goes running off screaming,” he recalled, according to Yahoo Sports.
He endured more than 70 surgeries at hospitals in Mississippi and elsewhere. None of them gave him back a face. None of them let him blink, eat without pain, or close his eyes to sleep. PR Newswire
He was slowly going blind.
The Surgeon Who Said It Was All or None
A fellow firefighter from Hardison’s church read about Dr. Eduardo D. Rodriguez, a reconstructive plastic surgeon at NYU Langone Medical Center in New York. He wrote to the doctor describing Patrick’s situation.
Rodriguez agreed to evaluate Hardison — but he was blunt about the risk. “You have to understand: If it were to fail, there is no bailout option,” Rodriguez told him. “You would likely die. This is a procedure that is all or none.” Fox News
Hardison said yes.
The surgery began the morning of August 14, 2015, and concluded 26 hours later. It involved a team of more than 100 physicians, nurses, and support staff — two synchronized surgical teams working simultaneously on the donor and the recipient in adjacent operating rooms. PR Newswire
The procedure was the most extensive face transplant ever performed anywhere in the world.
The Mother Who Gave Her Son’s Face to a Stranger
The face belonged to David Rodebaugh, a 27-year-old Brooklyn bicyclist who died after crashing into a pedestrian and sustaining a fatal head injury in 2015. amNewYork
His mother, Nancy Millar, had always known her son wanted to be an organ donor. But she asked the medical team to do something unusual — save his face. Then she heard about Patrick Hardison. She didn’t hesitate.
“When I met Patrick, I saw this strength, this strong, manly, burly kind of energy in him — that David had,” she told People magazine. “David wanted to be a firefighter, and I knew if this guy was a firefighter, this was right.”
In donating her son’s face, Millar gave Hardison back something no surgery had been able to restore: the possibility of an ordinary life.
What We Know
Patrick Hardison was burned on September 5, 2001, at age 27, in a Mississippi house fire
The fire destroyed his entire face, scalp, eyelids, ears, lips, and most of his nose
He underwent more than 70 surgeries over 14 years without meaningful restoration
On August 14–15, 2015, NYU Langone surgeon Dr. Eduardo Rodriguez led a 100-person team in a 26-hour face transplant — the most extensive ever performed
The donor was David Rodebaugh, 27, whose mother consented to donate his face
Hardison faced a 50% chance of dying during the surgery
He never experienced acute rejection — a near-universal complication among face transplant recipients NYU Langone News
He can now close his eyes, form facial expressions, and eat without pain; he is no longer at risk of going blind NYU Langone News
Why This Matters
Face transplantation remains one of the rarest and most ethically complex procedures in modern medicine. Hardison received what doctors confirmed was the most extensive soft-tissue face transplant performed anywhere in the world — and he survived without a single rejection episode, which doctors believe may be linked to an innovative combination of immunosuppressant drugs, including rituximab, never before used in a face transplant. amNewYorkNYU Langone News
His recovery has reshaped what surgeons believe is possible for first responders and burn victims.
But the story isn’t really about medicine. It’s about a father who kept showing up to little league games knowing children would run from him — and who kept going anyway. It’s about a mother who, in the worst moment of her life, found a way to let her son live on.
“I was angry for years,” Hardison told the audience at his one-year anniversary press conference, “but now I see this for what it is — a miracle. If I could go back, I would still go into that burning house.”