55 Flights of Stairs
By Bill Hay
On September 11, 2001 at approximately 8:48 am/et,
an evil atrocity against the United States was committed. The
responses to these attacks have varied from anger, rage, fear, to
uncertainty. Others have responded with acts of compassion and
bravery, some sacrificing their own lives to save others. President
Bush told the Nation: "We’re at war".
As some of you might know, I witnessed this attack
and also was a party to this terrible event. While a U.S. Marine, I
had been shot at in three wars and hit in two—at least in those
instances I knew who the enemy was. This atrocity was unlike anything
I have seen in my 73 years, and God willing I will never have to
experience anything like it again.
I would like to take this opportunity and means to
relate my experiences as they unfolded on 9.11.2001, the day that
changed a Nation.
The World Trade Institute (WTI) of Pace University
invited me to be a guest lecturer on Mexican Logistics. At 8:30 am/et
on September 11, I was standing behind a podium at their facility on
the fifty-fifth floor of the North Tower of the World Trade Center (WTC)
and began presenting an eight-hour seminar. We had just completed
self-introductions when suddenly we heard an explosion that was
followed by the rocking of the tower. The explosion did not register
with me, but the rocking did - first thing that went through my mind
was an earthquake. I soon realized that this was not the case when I
looked out a window and saw flames and debris falling from the floors
above.
My next words were, "Pick up your personal
effects and lets get the h*ll out of here!" I did not follow my
own instructions. I left my laptop, course outline, and briefcase
containing everything I owned of value. Still, I got out with my life,
what else could I ask for? Everything else is replaceable.
The class started down the fifty-five flights of
stairs along with hundreds of other people. There was no panic; people
were taking their time and helping those who needed it along the way.
At about the thirty-second floor, we met firemen that were on their
way up. They were laden with hoses, axes, crowbars, etc. These brave
firemen were the first ones to tell us that a plane had hit the
building. Somewhere along the way down someone must have opened a
water vending machine, because all of a sudden small bottles of water
were being passed up and down the stairs. People were taking a sip and
then passing it on to the next person. Up until the twentieth floor,
the stairwell was full of smoke and some water.
We did not hear the second explosion when the other
plane hit the South Tower. It took about thirty minutes to exit the
North Tower and get onto the street. Upon exiting this building, we
were immediately ushered over to Broadway. It was not until two days
later that I found out and I thank the Lord that all my class members
and the WTI staff were safe and accounted for.
Once out of the building, I thought I was now out
of danger. I was wrong—I then heard another explosion. Looking over
my shoulder I saw both towers in flames and a giant ash and debris
cloud coming down Broadway at hurricane speeds. I turned down at what
I believe to Ann Street in hopes of avoiding the raging cloud. A few
minutes later, I was engulfed with ash and debris from the top of my
gray hair to the bottom of my cowboy boots. Thank God I wear glasses;
they are the only things that saved my eyes. The dust was so thick; I
could not see my hand in front of my face. Everything and everybody
was coated with a layer of soot.
After what seemed like an eternity, the cloud
finally dissipated enough that I could see three men coming towards
me. I was informed by one of them that I could not exit that way and
would have to go back to Broadway. It was in this street that I met
Ellen. I took her in hand and we headed back towards Broadway. Ellen
too was in the North Tower and had walked down from the seventy-second
floor. When we reached the corner Ann Street and Broadway, a man I
assume was the manager of the Starbucks was all but dragging
pedestrians off the street and into his coffee shop. He and his
associate were providing tap and bottle water, paper towels to clean
our faces, plus anything else we may have needed without cost. I will
always remember the kindness and generosity of these Starbucks
employees.
A short time later, a city bus pulled up in front
of the Starbucks. Wanting to see the sun and sky again, Ellen and I
got on the crowded bus without any idea as to the destination. The
first stop the bus made was at the edge of Chinatown. Not knowing my
way around the city, I did not want to get too far from what is now
known as "ground zero" so we got off the bus here. It was
not more than two minutes later, when a young lady named Pam Lundquist
came up to us, saw our appearance and offered the hospitality of her
apartment. Over three hours had passed and this was the first
opportunity that I had to call and let my wife Mary and my office
staff know that I was fine and that I would give them all the details
later.
For the next four hours we did little but watch the
demise of the World Trade Center on television. Ellen and I were fed
and loaned some clothing. Late in the afternoon, Pam and Keith, one of
her roommates, escorted us back down to "ground zero" along
the river waterfront. By this time the ferryboats were running. We
took Ellen to the pier so she could get home to Bayonne, NJ. Pam and
Keith then walked me back to my hotel on Gold Street, the Holiday Inn
Wall Street. After that, they then had a good five-mile walk back
home. Just for the record, Pam Lundquist is my guardian angel. To this
day I do not know what I would have done if it had not been for her
generosity and kindness.
The scene of lower Manhattan walking up from the
river is almost indescribable. The streets were covered with one to
four inches of ash and debris. Not a single taxi, bus or automobile
was moving on any of the streets. The only things on the roads were
emergency vehicles. Your legs were the only means of transportation,
and the number of pedestrians could be counted on two hands. Nothing
was open. Nothing was moving. This part of the city was dead.
Less than an hour after I got back to my hotel, the
power went off. The gas and water were the next to go. Dinner that
night was half of a tuna sandwich and a beer that I shared with
another hotel guest. On Wednesday morning, the hotel conditions had
not improved other than somehow the kitchen staff managed to serve
coffee, danish and orange juice. For $9.95, you could have cold cuts,
hard rolls, and cold cereal. I passed.
I checked out of the hotel and went looking for
better accommodations with two other guests. We walked up to Canal
Street, a distance of about three miles. From there, we took a subway
up to "Time Square" (Forty-seventh and Broadway) and checked
into the Doubletree Hotel.
I spent the better part of the next two days on the
phone trying to get a flight back to San Diego. As everyone knows, all
the flights were cancelled and the airports were shut down and nothing
was moving or flying into or out of New York. I couldn’t even get a
phone call through to any living person at the airlines and only got
recorded messages telling me what I already knew: "All flights
have been cancelled. All airplanes are grounded until further
notice."
Around 6:30 am on Friday the 14th, my luck changed
for the better. I finally got through to Ms. Irene Baker, an America
West agent in Phoenix, AZ and told her my sad tale of woe. Again I
received the same response as before - no aircraft are flying in or
out of the New York area. Then, I got a great idea: if got down to
Philadelphia, could she get me home from there? The answer was yes,
but you definitely could not consider it a direct flight. I would
leave Philadelphia at 6:47 pm/et and travel by way of Columbus, OH and
Las Vegas, NV. I would have to layover in Las Vegas that night and
take a 9:10 am/pt to San Diego and home the next morning. After a few
minutes of waiting, she was back on the line with confirmations and
seat assignments. I was going home.
Ms. Baker called my wife Mary with my itinerary and
instructions to call her at her home if I had any problems along the
way. I took a quick shower, checked out of the hotel, walked ten
blocks in the rain to the Greyhound Bus Depot, and left New York City
at 11:30 am on the Philadelphia Express. When I arrived at the
Philadelphia station, I crossed the street and took the subway out to
the airport. I checked in with America West using only a credit card
with my picture on it and a faxed photocopy of my passport the office
had sent (the original lies beneath the WTC Tower 1 rubble, along with
anything else I had with me on September 11). My bag was inspected by
security, I got something to eat, got on board my flight, and began my
trip home. Next stop Columbus, then on to Las Vegas. I checked into
another Holiday Inn at 11:30 pm/pt that night.
Saturday at 6:30 am/pt, I joined hundreds of other
passengers waiting in the America West check-in line. It began outside
the Las Vegas International Airport on the street. After two hours I
had just gotten inside the terminal building and my flight was
scheduled to leave in forty minutes. There were still dozens of people
ahead of me in line but I knew I had to do something if I wanted to
get on this flight. I walked to the first class check-in agent, gave
her my name, and asked her if she could help me. The agent told me not
to worry and that they had been looking for me. She assured me that I
would get on the flight even if they had to hold it a few minutes
(they didn’t need too). Upon arrival in San Diego, I don’t know
who was the happiest: Mary and my family or I.
My thoughts and prayers are with everyone affected
by this horrible tragedy on September 11, 2001. Thankfully, events of
terror like this are infrequent and definitely not "the
norm". However, questions will still remain and be asked by many
like: Where is God in all of this? How could He allow such evil to
happen? Although we do not always understand God’s ways, we can
still trust that He is in control of the world. We know that all that
happens to us is working for our good if we love God and are fitting
onto His plan (Romans 8:28).
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