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A Layoff Results in a Xmas Gift for One Family

When Ralph Hanahan gave up his job, it allowed his friend to remain employed.

ByABC News via logo
December 22, 2008, 10:13 AM

Dec. 22, 2008 — -- Mike Camp and Ralph Hanahan worked together closely for five years as the go-to computer guys at the Governor's School of the Arts and Humanities in Greenville, S.C.

If a computer was on the fritz or an e-mail couldn't be opened, teachers and students went to the pair for aid.

"We worked as a team ... and pretty interchangeable ... almost like two halves of the same heart," Camp, 40, said.

But when rumblings of the nation's economic crisis hit South Carolina, Hanahan, 55, worried the school would be forced to choose between him and Camp.

Camp said, "I think he realized that if the trends didn't stop, there would be layoffs at the school and he expected that one of the two of us would be targeted for that."

Indeed, the school alerted staff last month that an unknown number of employees would be laid off in the coming weeks. To stave off any difficult decisions and help his younger friend, Hanahan did something that sent the school and town abuzz.

"Ralph, indeed, stepped forward and said, 'If you have to do this, you should take me,'" said school president Bruce Halverson said.

Hanahan, who had worked more than 20 years as a state employee, volunteered to take the hit and save Camp from the layoff list.

"I'm astonished that anyone in this day and time can do that," Camp said. "He'll have our gratitude for an endless time."

Camp surprised Hanahan on "Good Morning America" today and offered his thanks for the sacrifice he made.

Click here to tell "GMA" whom you'd like to thank.A tearful Hanahan, who now collects $326 in unemployment and continues looking for work, was surprised to see his story aired on "GMA."

"He started off as our Thanksgiving angel and now he's our Christmas angel," said Camp's mother, Martha Pool, who wrote into "GMA" to tell the family's story. "This man made it possible for them to continue their life uninterrupted."

Hanahan knew Camp and his wife, Lorrie Camp, had four young children ages 6 to 10. The couple's youngest child, Aaron, suffers from severe autism.