Jake and Caitlin Hitchner, right, pose for a photo with their baby son, Boston, by the car where he was born on Dec. 30. Boston arrived in the front passenger seat while Jake drove on I-5 on the way to the Seattle hospital from their home in Edmonds. (Annie Barker / The Herald)

Jake and Caitlin Hitchner, right, pose for a photo with their baby son, Boston, by the car where he was born on Dec. 30. Boston arrived in the front passenger seat while Jake drove on I-5 on the way to the Seattle hospital from their home in Edmonds. (Annie Barker / The Herald)

Edmonds mom: ‘That’s the story of how I gave birth in the car at 12:56 am.’

The couple’s fourth son was born en route to the hospital, in the front seat. “You can’t stop a baby who wants to come out.”

EDMONDS — Jake and Caitlin Hitchner bought a new SUV in mid-December to tote around their growing family.

It turned out to be a delivery van.

What’s up with that?

Caitlin gave birth to their fourth baby, Boston, in the front seat as Jake drove down I-5 to the hospital.

“We are those people who couldn’t make it to the hospital,” Caitlin said. “We had a baby in the freakin’ car.”

The couple were on a dark and deserted stretch of I-5 headed to Swedish First Hill Campus in Seattle from Edmonds shortly after midnight on Dec. 30.

Caitlin yelled at Jake to gun it.

“He’s like, ‘I don’t want to get pulled over,’” said Caitlin, 31. “I was like, ‘We need to get pulled over. We need help.’”

“I never have gotten a speeding ticket in my life,” said Jake, 40. He was already breaking the law doing 68 mph.

He was confident they’d make it to the hospital on time.

“This is our fourth kid. We’ve done this. I know how this goes,” he said.

All are boys, 5 and under. Both parents are elementary school teachers in the Mukilteo School District, so they know how to deal with kids who can’t wait, on and off the job.

Caitlin has 35,600 followers on TikTok with videos of her life as a teacher and a “boy mom.” She was too preoccupied to TikTok the freeway event the morning of Dec. 30.

Here’s how Caitlin announced the arrival of baby Boston in a group text to friends later that day:

Contractions started at 11 pm, I waited about an hour to call but I knew something wasn’t right. The hospital said ‘get here now’ but we live 30 min away. I’m truly screaming at Jake to get in the car bc of the pain. We start driving and the contractions are literally taking over my body with no breaks.

Get on I-5, we are at the Greenlake exit when I realize…. We won’t make it to the hospital. I’m screaming at Jake to pull over but he won’t. Map says we are still 12 min away from the hospital.

I unbuckle, turn my body around, and push. I feel his head and scream to call 911. He does and 911 is on the line, he’s still driving when on the 2nd push Boston fully comes out. Jake finally pulls over while helping me catch him.

His cord is wrapped around his neck so we freak out, get it undone and he cries. Ambulance and fire pull up and tend to us on the side of the road at the 50th St exit about 3 min after he’s born. And anyway. That’s the story of how I gave birth in the car at 12:56 am.

And what a story.

“En route” is the box she checked on his birth certificate. There really is such a thing?

Not making it to the hospital is a parent’s worst nightmare.

Rick Johnson, a spokesperson for the Washington State Patrol in King County, said this doesn’t happen often.

“In 33 years, I can remember this happening only a few times, but not that the baby is born before the fire department gets there,” Johnson said. “In my district there are hospitals pretty close no matter where you live.”

Trooper Kelsey Harding is spokesperson for District 7, which covers Snohomish, Island, San Juan, Skagit and Whatcom counties.

“It’s not a common thing, by any means,” Harding said.

She could recall one incident in the last five years that a trooper delivered a baby by the roadside, but not any births in a moving car. In November 2018, a trooper calmly delivered a baby girl at 1:59 a.m. on the shoulder of I-5 south of Everett, where the parents stopped for help.

In this case, it was a not-so-calm Caitlin at the helm, rolling down the freeway.

Jake, well, he just kept driving.

Caitlin was on her knees, facing backwards on the passenger seat of the 2021 Volkswagen Atlas SUV they’d owned for two weeks.

“He was coming out,” she said. “I started freaking out. I said to my husband, ‘He’s coming right now,’ and my husband said, ‘No, he’s not.’ I feel his head. He feels the head and he was like, ‘Shoot.’”

Then what?

“He goes, ‘Hey, Siri. Call 911.’ The 911 operator said, ‘You need to pull the car over and help your wife,’” she said. “The car is moving. He’s not pulling the car over.”

Jake said the side of the road seemed unsafe. He was holding out for an exit, even though Boston wasn’t.

“I’m keeping my eye on the road. I put my hand over, and sure enough, I’m palming like a small basketball, palming his head,” he said. “I just kept my hand there, holding his head while I’m driving and talking to the dispatcher.”

Jake pulled over at the 50th Street exit and put the car in park just in time to catch the baby from sliding off the seat.

“He just dropped into my hands. He came out silent. There was no noise,” he said. “The dispatcher said to check to see if the cord is around his neck. It was dark. I can’t see him. I’m grasping around his neck. I got a hold of the cord and pulled it once, pulled it twice. Then his cry came out.”

Medics arrived within minutes. An ambulance took mother and son to the hospital, where they were released later that night, healthy and happy.

Jake said they reflected on the birth on the drive home up I-5.

“I remembered her doing this death scream,” he said. “I’d never heard my wife scream like that before.”

Here is a recording of the 911 call:

Everett Herald · Jake Hitchner 911 Call

Boston was due Jan. 5.

“You can’t stop a baby who wants to come out,” Caitlin said.

He weighed 8 pounds, 10 ounces.

“He was fully cooked,” she said.

Their other kids are Jace, 5, Greyson, 3, and Kaid, almost 2.

Caitlin chose Boston because she liked the name, even though she has never been to Boston.

“People say, ‘Why didn’t you change his name to Carson?’” she said.

No need. He’ll always be the car son.

Is there a person, place or thing making you wonder “What’s Up With That?” Contact reporter Andrea Brown: 425-339-3443; abrown@heraldnet.com; Twitter: @reporterbrown.

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