The Empire State Building and neighboring building struck by burning debris are on fire after the sky scraper was hit by a B-25 in the fog. |
On the morning of September 11, 2001
I was in the office of Briargate Elementary School in Cary, Illinois where I was head building custodian. It was a few minutes before the beginning of classes. Busses
were beginning to pull up to the front of the school with their full
loads. Teachers were flitting in an out to check their mailboxes. I was
leaning on the front counter chatting
with the school secretary and the nurse.
As usual a radio was quietly
playing. We weren’t paying close attention.
The nurse first realized
something was amiss and darted over to turn
up the volume. After a bit of confusion we learned that an airplane had slammed into the World Trade
Center Towers in New York City. None of us knew quite what that meant.
And none of us suspected that it
might be a terrorist attack. Almost the first words out of my mouth were something like, “A bomber hit the Empire State Building during World
War II.” Then all hell broke loose, the telephones began to ring off the hook,
and shaken teachers began pouring into the office, some crying, wondering what to do…
The event that I dredged from my
memory that morning occurred on Saturday, July 28, 1944. On that distant
morning the skies over the Big Apple were not a crystalline, perfect blue. The city
was engulfed in a dense fog. The confused
pilot of a B-25 Mitchell Army Air
Force bomber took a wrong turn
and slammed into the side of the world tallest building between its 78th and 80th floors.
An Army Air Force B-25 Mitchell Bomber like the one that struck the Empire State Building. |
Earlier
that morning the B-25 with the name Old
John Feather Merchant painted on
its nose took off from Bedford Army
Air Field in Massachusetts on a routine personnel transportation mission
bound for Newark, New Jersey. In the pilot’s seat was Lt. Colonel
William Franklin Smith, Jr., an experience combat veteran who had miraculously
completed his 25 missions over Europe and was now back in the States flying
non stressful milk runs like
this one. The flight was so routine that Smith had neither a co-pilot nor a navigator. Staff Sergeant
Christopher Domitrovich, a radio
operator, was the only other crew
member. There was one passenger, Navy Aviation Mate Albert Perna who had hitched a ride on what was supposed to be a dead head flight to pick up other passengers.
As Col. Smith approached metropolitan New York he flew into a dense fog. He radioed
for permission to land in Newark. The tower
strongly recommended against it. “We
can’t even see the Empire State Building”
a controller said. Instead he was directed to land at New York Municipal Airport, now known
as LaGuardia, which is on the north end of the Borough of Queens on Long
Island jutting out into the East River.
But Smith, with the single
mindedness of a veteran bomber pilot, was determined to complete his mission as assigned. He would not land at LaGuardia. He did not directly refuse the request not to proceed to Newark. His last
transmission was a simple if cryptic,
“Thank you very much.”
Lt. Col. William F. Smith, Jr. survived 25 European bomber missions. He did not survive a State-side milk run. |
He began a descent toward the New Jersey field but somehow got confused and turned in
toward Manhattan’s dense forest of
skyscrapers instead of over open
water for the approach to the field.
About the time he passed the Chrysler
Building there is evidence that the
fog lifted enough for him to realize
that he was fly amid the buildings.
He began to try to correct. But it was too late. Moments later at 9:40 am, his plane slammed into the Empire State Building.
The plane smacked into the offices of National Catholic Welfare Services on the 79th floor which were quickly engulfed in a ball of flame. Therese
Fortier Willig a twenty year old clerk
recalled:
In the other side of the office, all I could see was flames
Mr. Fountain [her boss] was walking through the office when the plane hit the
building and he was on fire — I mean, his clothes were on fire, his head was on
fire. Six of us managed to get into this one office that seemed to be untouched
by the fire and close the door before it engulfed us. There was no doubt that
the other people must have been killed.
And indeed they were. Most of the 11 people in the building who were killed were on this floor and in this office. Some were incinerated at their desks.
Others were engulfed by the fire
wall as they tried to escape. Mr. Fountain continued walking, on fire until co-workers put him out. He
was taken to a hospital where he died in agony days later. Willig and her cohorts behind that door survived with only smoke inhalation injuries
until rescued by firefighters.
Fire fighters and police examine the charred wreckage of the Catholic Welfare Service Offices after the crash. No, I don't know who the apparent time traveler in the T-shirt and backpack was... |
On board the plane Col. Smith and
Sgt. Domitrovich, each strapped into their seats, were killed instantly and their bodies burnt. Perna, the young sailor, was thrown clear of the wreckage and his body fell down an elevator shaft and was not
discovered for two days.
The force of the impact tore the
two engines, from the wings. One tore completely
through the building from the north
façade where impact was made,
out the south wall. It landed on the penthouse of a building
across the street which was destroyed
by fire. The second engine severed the cables of two elevators
before falling down a shaft. Betty Lou Oliver, a 19 year old elevator operator dropped 73 floors in
her car. Miraculously she was not killed
but sustained a broken pelvis, back and neck. She continues to hold an unenviable record—for surviving
the longest free fall in an
elevator.
On dozens of floors of the building
the force of the impact hurled office workers to the floor or
against walls. Many sustained injuries from being struck by
falling furniture and other objects, in addition to those who were struck by debris from the crash its self. The fire and smoke and the damage to the
elevators trapped hundreds in their
offices where many suffered smoke
inhalation. There was naturally panic. One man, Paul
Dearing, leapt to his death from
a window in fear of being caught in the fire.
On
the ground outside and in buildings in the area, the collision stunned observers, who were shaken
by the impact. They could see the rear third of the bomber, with
its distinctive dual wide spaced vertical tail stabilizers clearly
visible as smoke and flames billowed
from the building.
The response by the New York
City Fire Department was stellar
despite the fact that this fire was higher
and more intense than any they had
ever experienced—or trained for. Fire fighters had to trudge up staircases carrying hoses and heavy gear. Survivor Willig
recalled:
…and all of a sudden here were firemen and they’re coming to
rescue us, all dressed up in their raincoats, whatever they wear. It was just wonderful. We climbed out through
the broken glass. I was just grateful to be alive.
Firemen led—or carried hundreds to
safety and fought the intensely hot
blaze. Within 40 minutes of reaching the blaze they had the fire under control. Damage
from the flames was confined to only
two floors. The fire remains the highest major blaze ever successfully
extinguished.
The headline. |
Damage to the 78th and 79th floors was naturally substantial. But
the building itself was structurally sound
and as soon as elevator service was
restored tenants in most of the
building were able to open for
business on the following Monday. In
three short months crews repaired bent
girders, closed and sealed the holes in the outer walls, and restored
the two floors of offices. Some damage to the outer stone walls can
still be seen. Cost of the repairs was estimated at the time to be about $1 million—$13 million in current value.
When the repairs were complete,
National Catholic Welfare Services, now known as Catholic Relief Services, moved
right back into their former space.
The organization continues to
occupy the suit to this day.
Subsequent
investigations lay the blame
for the accident squarely on the shoulders of the late and unfortunate Col. Smith. They found that aircraft crossing Manhattan at that point were expected to maintain an altitude of at least 2,000 feet. He struck the building at only 913 feet. There were also questions about why the Army would allow such a low
priority mission be flown at all to
a destination known the likely be souped
in.
Within eight months of the collision
the Federal government offered cash
settlements to victims and their surviving
family members. Most accepted the payments, but some sought
to sue the Army for negligence. But in those days it was illegal for private citizens to sue the Federal government or any of its agencies for damage. The accident helped speed the new Federal Tort Claims Act of 1946, with provisions making it retroactively apply to
victims of the Empire State crash.
After 9/11 I was not the only one to remember the 1944 crash. Conspiracy theorists
seized on the survival of the Empire State Building with minimal structural damage while the two towers of the World Trade center each collapsed after being hit by a jet liner as proof that something nefarious happened in
the latter crashes. Of course the
theorists were stupidly wrong. The severity
of the impacts can hardly be
compared, and the buildings were of very
different construction.
The B-25 weighed about 27,000 pounds and was traveling at an air speed of around 200 miles per hour, carrying a
normal fuel load of 974 gallons at
take-off, much of which had been used
in the flight. By contrast each 9/11
Boeing 727-200 jet weighed around 274,000
pounds, one striking a tower at 470 mph and the other a 590 mph, and were each carrying about 10,000 gallons of jet fuel on
impact. The kinetic energy of the 2001 collisions was exponentially greater than the 1944 crash.
Dear Conspiracy Theorists: No, this isn't the same at all, you freakin' morons. |
And the Empire State Building, constructed on a skeleton of relatively
closely spaced steel beams and clad in thick layers of limestone was much sturdier that the Twin Towers which were built with lighter weight manganese
alloy steel beams spaced wider apart and clad in essentially a glass curtain. The manganese alloy also actually burned more readily than the old steel of
the classic skyscraper.
Of course these facts will not stop any ignoramuses from flapping their jaws.
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