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Eyewitness Accounts Dennis Smith Describes His Worst Nightmare DENNIS SMITH, Firehouse Magazine Founding Editor The second tower
has just collapsed. I am at Ladder 16, and the firefighters have commandeered
a crowded 67th Street cross-town bus. We go without stopping from Lexington
Avenue to the staging center on Amsterdam. We don't talk much on the
bus, and not a single passenger complains about missing his or her stop. It is like approaching a beach as we walk down West Street, passing hundreds of waiting emergency vehicles. First there is a little concrete dust, like powdered soft sand, and then suddenly every step kicks up a cloud. There is paper debris everywhere, strewn between window casings, air conditioner grates, and large chunks of what had once been the tallest structures in the world. We report to the
command chief who is standing ankle deep in mud between Just before that collapse, a falling woman killed a firefighter, and Father Judge was giving him the last rites. Bill Feehan, the First Deputy Commissioner, was standing next to them. And then the building came down. Now, several hundred firefighters are milling about. There is not much
for us to do except pull hose from one location to another as a pumper
and a ladder truck are repositioned. It is like the eye of a storm,
eerily Because of the pervasive gray dusting, I cannot read the street signs as I make my way to the other side. Many cars and trucks are overturned. From here I can see the gaping holes in the side of the Verizon Building. There is a lone fire company down a narrow street wetting down a smoldering pile. The mountains of debris in every direction are fifty and sixty feet high. I am still stunned by the wreckage, and it is only now that I begin to think of the human toll, of the silent thousands that are unseen before me in this utter ruin. I am again on the West Street side, and the chiefs begin to push us back towards the Hudson. Number 7 is about to fall, and when it does, we all think to run for cover, into stores, behind ambulances, around a corner. But, it is an incredible thing to watch a 47-story building fall. The regality of a high building is transformed in a few seconds to mere rubble. And, now I think that this building has fallen on those we seek. No one wants to say a number. We know that entire companies are unaccounted for. The department's elite squads, Rescue 1, Rescue 2, Rescue 3, and Rescue 4 are not heard from. Just last week I talked with a group of Rescue 1 firefighters about the difficult and rigid prerequisites to get into the rescue companies - the endorsements from other company commanders and the tests of mechanical and engineering skills. I remember thinking then that these were truly unusual men, smart and thoughtful, the kind of men into whose arms I would put the lives of my children. I know the captain of Rescue 1, Terry Hatten. He is married to the Mayor's assistant, Beth Patrone, and one of those universally loved and respected men in the job. I think about Terry, and about Paddy Brown. Paddy is one of a small cadre of most decorated firefighters in the history of the department, and in the nineties he was on the front page of all the newspapers when he lowered one of his men on a rope to pick up a victim in a Times Square fire. And I think of Brian Hickey, the Captain of Rescue 4, who just last month survived the blast of the Astoria fire that killed three firefighters, including two of his own men. I remember the sadness in his eyes at the funerals. And, now.... He was working with Rescue 3 today. And then there is Ray Downey, the Battalion Chief who led the FDNY collapse specialists to Okalahoma City, a solid and giving man. I am pulling a heavy
six-inch hose through the muck when I see Mike Carter, the Vice-president
of the firefighters union, on the hose just before me. He's a good friend,
and we barely say hello to each other. I see Kevin Gallagher, the union
president, who is looking for his son who is unaccounted for. Someone
calls to me. It is Jimmy Boyle, the retired president of the union,
the man who gave us such great leadership in my time in the job. "I
can't find Michael," he says. Michael Boyle, his son, was with
Engine 33, and the whole company is missing. I can't say anything The immediate danger over, the army of construction workers, police officers, EMTs and firefighters begins to work. People who have never met begin working side by side as if they have practiced for months. Cars are lifted, hoses and fire trucks moved, and the heavy equipment is brought in. As I watch the steelworkers they progress in my mind from admirable to heroic. I don't have boots and I am wet to the knees. I will 'take up" as we say, and go home. At the end of this horrific day I think of Shakespeare's line about evil living forever, and I realize how most of the good of everything I know about this world is interred beneath the rubble before me. It will be days before there is a final accounting, and I can only hope against hope for the people I have mentioned. They have been friends
of mine for many years. It was from their lives that New York's firefighters
learned how to keep their chins up in danger, and how to get down on
their knees when help is needed. It is because of them, and this terrible
number of lost firefighters, whatever number that might be, that inspiration
will be found to go on with our lives. The last thing I see is Kevin
Gallagher kissing another firefighter. It is On Tuesday, 9-11, I was awakened in the early morning by a fellow Connecticut firefighter who frantically told me to tune into CNN. He said the top floors of one of the World Trade Center towers were heavily involved in fire. After watching for about ten minutes, I learned that a plane had crashed into the upper floors of the building. What was amazing, was that no one, including myself, even considered the possibility that this could have been the result of a terrorist attack. Then a newsperson unwittingly pointed out how strange it was to have such an accident when the weather is so clear. Duh! As I began thinking of the possibilities, I tuned in my scanner to the NYFD Manhattan fire frequency. I listened to Manhattan Dispatch call World Trade Center Command several times to report the locations of people trapped. "Manhattan
to World Trade Center Command, be advised we have a report of 100 "Command Received, we'll get on it," replied Command. The next transmission:
"Manhattan to Command, we also have 82 people trapped Command again responded, "We've got crews working their way up to them." As this was all going on I watched in horror as I both listened to the live FDNY radio transmissions and witnessed, on live TV, the second jet crashing into building #2. It made it seem like I was there as my sense were saturated with the audio and video. Then, I heard a call that sent a chill down my spine. "Manhattan
to Command, I'm receiving a May Day call from a firefighter from As friends and family called, I found my hand shaking uncontrollably. I continued to listen as Manhattan dispatch gave the World Trade Center Command a rundown of units assigned to the two separate incidents. "Command, you have a total of 10 alarms on building #1 and 5 alarms on building #2," said the dispatcher. Just then, the unthinkable happened....a total collapse of the first World Trade Center building! I was in total shock, leaving me speechless to the person on the phone. In fact, I think I hung the phone up on them without any further spoken word. I could not get past the thoughts of all the emergency workers who I had seen on TV minutes before running into the building and just heard on the radio minutes before! I continued to listen as Manhattan Dispatch tirelessly repeated its call to World Trade Center Command. This went on for several minutes without response from anyone from the scene. Then, a voice, and I felt a quickly dashed glimmer of hope as I heard the message. A Battalion Chief radioed Manhattan, "We can't breathe. We need help down here, please.. We need help," the Chief said, his voice distressed. My hopes were dashed. "Stay calm Chief we have additional units on the way," the dispatcher said. I listened to the radio cry for help from the Chief, while I continued to watch on TV a huge plume of smoke and dust envelope the entire World Trade Center area. Obviously the dispatcher, with no TV, had no idea of what had just happened. I did not hear any more transmissions from the Chief. The radio was silent for what seemed an eternity. Then several minutes later I heard the following: "Ladder 10 to Manhattan," a voice called. The Manhattan dispatcher seemed relieved for the few seconds that followed until they learned that the person they were speaking was not Command, but an EMS worker. "This is an EMS worker.. There has been a major collapse" said the EMS worker. "Manhattan to Ladder 10, find someone with a white hat [a Chief] and have them contact Manhattan forthwith," said the dispatcher. The EMS worker responded... "I don't think you understand...WE need help...there's no one around..." As I sat in disbelief listening to the radio and absolutely horrified, the phone rang. My wife was calling from a local hospital where she was working and awakened me from my trance. She informed me that Connecticut hospitals were preparing to take some of the bounded or transfers from other hospitals. I immediately hung up the phone and called my Fire Department, Stamford Fire & Rescue Department, where I work as a Lieutenant, to see if there was anything I could do. I was scheduled for that night anyway, but I was then ordered in to man a second rescue for our city. Mutual aid units
to FDNY were being mustered from across the state. Myself, A short time later, a "Task Force" of an Engine, Truck and Rescue Company was sent to Westchester County to stand by for possible deployment into New York. We were ready to help. On a nice day, from Stamford, Connecticut we can easily see the two World Trade Center towers. Our landscape, our hearts and souls have now been changed forever. It is now many hours later and the images on the TV and sounds on the fire scanner continue to haunt me. And I continue to hope and pray that there are many more survivors and many more rescues. God bless all our brothers and sisters who were killed today and those who will be spending the next weeks or months sifting through the ruble trying to recover their bodies. There are simply no words that could ever express how we all feel. Sincerely,
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