Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There wasn’t a cloud in the sky that day. I remember how crystal clear and perfect the day began. Those sorts of days freak me out to this day.
It was a weirdly beautiful day and once we got home in the afternoon after picking up our kids on Capitol Hill it was eerily quiet because we had no airplane noise overhead (we live near the river so on the flight path).
Anonymous wrote:There wasn’t a cloud in the sky that day. I remember how crystal clear and perfect the day began. Those sorts of days freak me out to this day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sophomore at NYU. Felt and heard the first plane fly about 1000 feet over my head near Union Square. Then watch it hit the South Tower as I walked to class.
My friend sitting next to me was discreetly listening to a radio in class. He told me it was an attack. I interrupted a 200 person lecture to tell our professor that a 2nd plane hit the other Tower. Professor didn't believe me and started yelling at me! This was pre wifi, but then a bunch of kids start getting cell phone calls from their parents. It was nuts.
Watched both Towers collapse in-person, about 2 miles away. Had two friends sleeping on the floor of my dorm for a week, because their dorm was at Water Street only a few blocks from the disaster site. One kid left his window cracked open and entire room was covered in dust and debris.
The one thing you never forget about 9/11: that acrid smell. I've never smelled anything like that again in my life.
The first plane hit the north tower
Anonymous wrote:Working at a hospital in Maryland. Saw it on a patient's tv in their room. We started prepping for an onslaught of patients, but of course, they never came.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dropped my child off at first grade in Fairfax. Was cleaning and watching the Today show and saw the first plane hit the WTC. The window was open and I heard the plane hit the Pentagon.
Whoa you could hear it from Fairfax?
Anonymous wrote:Sophomore at NYU. Felt and heard the first plane fly about 1000 feet over my head near Union Square. Then watch it hit the South Tower as I walked to class.
My friend sitting next to me was discreetly listening to a radio in class. He told me it was an attack. I interrupted a 200 person lecture to tell our professor that a 2nd plane hit the other Tower. Professor didn't believe me and started yelling at me! This was pre wifi, but then a bunch of kids start getting cell phone calls from their parents. It was nuts.
Watched both Towers collapse in-person, about 2 miles away. Had two friends sleeping on the floor of my dorm for a week, because their dorm was at Water Street only a few blocks from the disaster site. One kid left his window cracked open and entire room was covered in dust and debris.
The one thing you never forget about 9/11: that acrid smell. I've never smelled anything like that again in my life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dropped my child off at first grade in Fairfax. Was cleaning and watching the Today show and saw the first plane hit the WTC. The window was open and I heard the plane hit the Pentagon.
Whoa you could hear it from Fairfax?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dropped my child off at first grade in Fairfax. Was cleaning and watching the Today show and saw the first plane hit the WTC. The window was open and I heard the plane hit the Pentagon.
Whoa you could hear it from Fairfax?
Anonymous wrote:We were stationed in North Carolina at the time and living in base housing. My neighbor came over and told me and I changed the channel from Disney to CNN. Later in the day I kept trying to call DH but got no answer. Finally, around 7:30 he called and said the Squadron CO had ordered all flight crews to remain at the air field for any call. At about midnight, I finally turned off my tv, went and got my oldest from her bed, my newborn from her crib, put them in my bed, and sat up all night saying the rosary next to them. Our section of base housing were all junior officers and their wives and children. I remember looking out the window before I turned off the tv everyone’s lights were still on. Everything changed that day.