Thursday, April 18, AD 2024 7:24pm

Unforgettable Flight 93

When they got up that morning eleven years ago the very last thing that the 33 passengers and the seven crew of United Flight 93 expected was to be engaged in a life and death struggle to retake an airliner that was headed to Washington DC as a terrorist missile.    All they expected the day to bring was a hum drum flight from Newark to San Francisco.  Just ordinary people living their lives.  Their occupations included pilot, first officer, flight attendant, an environmental lawyer, the owner of a public relations firm,  university students, a senior vice president of a medical development company, a sales representative for Good Housekeeping magazine, a manager of a US Wildlife animal refuge, an arborist, an account manager for a corporation, an ironworker, retirees, a computer programmer, a computer engineer, a lobbyist for the disabled, a real estate agent,  an executive vice president of a corporation and a free lance medical writer.  They were wives, husbands, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters, all with unique histories and lives, with little in common except that they happened to be on board Flight 93 when the world changed.

The plane took off at 8:42 AM Eastern Time.  Four terrorists had boarded amidst the other 33 passengers.  The terrorists began to hijack the plane at 9:28 AM, soon after both the hijacked airliners had struck the Twin Towers in New York City, and just brief minutes before a fourth airliner was hijacked in Washington and slammed into the Pentagon.  At 9:28:17 AM a member of the cockpit crew shouted “Mayday! Mayday!” over the radio, with sounds of violence in the background.  35 seconds later someone in the cockpit shouted over the radio, “Mayday!  Get out of here!  Get out of here!”

By 9:31 AM the terrorists were in control of the cockpit.  They informed the passengers that they were in control of the plane and falsely told them they had a bomb.  Now began the final 30 minutes of Flight 93.

Passengers and crew during these final 30 minutes made 35 airphone calls and two cell phone calls.  They quickly learned of the other hijacked planes that had been flown into the Twin Towers.

Passenger Jeremy Glick managed to reach his wife.  He told her that the passengers voted whether to try to take back the plane and decided that they were going to attempt it.  He retained his sense of humor telling his wife that he still had his butter knife from the meal that had been served on board the plane.  Before he and the other passengers attacked the hijackers he wished her and their daughter a happy life, a clear indication that he did not expect to survive the effort to retake the plane.

Flight Attendant Sandra Bradshaw called her husband and told him that she was boiling water to throw on the hijackers.

Passenger Thomas Burnett, Jr. called his wife and she told him about the other planes that had hit the Twin Towers.  He called her back after their first conversation and told her:  “We’re going to take back the plane.  We can’t wait for the authorities. I don’t know what they could do anyway. It’s up to us. I think we can do it.”

“What do you want me to do?” Deena, his wife, asked him.

“Pray, Deena,” he said “Just pray.”

He ended the phone call by telling his wife:  “I know we’re all going to die – there’s three of us who are going to do something about it. I love you honey.”

Burnett was a devout Catholic.  He began attending daily mass in 1998.  When his wife asked him why he was doing this he told her:  ‘I feel like God is calling me to do something, and I don’t know what it is. But I know it’s going to have a great impact on a lot of people.’ He said, ‘The reason I’ve been going to daily Mass is because I feel like if I can be closer to God, then I’ll know what his plan is for me.'”

Passenger Todd Beamer attempted to reach his wife, but was unsuccessful in doing so.  He ended up talking to GTE supervisor Lisa Jefferson.  He told her that one of the passengers had been killed by the hijackers, and the pilot and co-pilot were reportedly dead or dying.  He told her that the passengers were going to jump the hijackers and attempt to land the plane before the terrorists could carry out the rest of their plan.  He recited the Our Father with Jefferson before the effort to retake the plane began.  The last audible words that Jefferson could hear from Beamer were:  “Are you guys ready?  Let’s roll.”

The passengers rushed the hijackers at 9:57 AM.  They quickly subdued whichever hijackers were outside of the cockpit and began to break into the cockpit, a fact verified by a call made by Flight Attendant Cee Cee Lyles to her husband.  The terrorists in the cockpit began to rock the plane side to side in order to throw the attacking passengers off balance.  As the passengers broke into the cockpit the terrorists crashed the plane near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.  The heroic passengers and crew of Flight 93 could not save their own lives, but they made certain that the terrorists with them would murder no one else that day.  As long as America lives, their memory will never be forgotten.

Crew of Flight 93

Plane Captain Jason Dahl

First Officer Leroy Homer

Flight Attendant Lorraine Bay

Flight Attendant Sandra Bradshaw

Flight Attendant Wanda Green

Flight Attendant CeeCee Lyles

Flight Attendat Deborah Welsh

Passengers of Flight 93

Christian Adams

Todd Beamer

Alan Beaven

Mark Bingham

Deora Bodley

Marion Britton

Thomas E. Burnett Jr

William Cashman

Georgine Corrigan

Patricia Cushing

Joseph Deluca

Patrick Driscoll

Edward Felt

Jane Folger

Colleen Fraser

Andrew Garcia

Jeremy Glick

Lauren Grandcolas

Donald F. Green

Linda Gronlund

Richard Guadagno

Toshiya Kuge

Hilda Marcin

Waleska Martinez

Nicole Miller

Louis J. Nacke II

Donald Peterson

Jean Peterson

Mark Rothenberg

Christine Snyder

John Talignani

Honor Wainio

Kristin White

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Dante alighieri
Admin
Tuesday, September 11, AD 2012 7:47am

I rarely cry during movies, but I balled through much of Flight 93. I was interning on Capitol Hill on 9/11, and it is quite possible I’m alive only because of the actions of these heroes. God grant them eternal rest.

Paul W. Primavera
Tuesday, September 11, AD 2012 7:51am

Thank you, Donald!

Dante alighieri
Admin
Tuesday, September 11, AD 2012 9:23am

Rage and sorrow: that sums up my feelings, then and now as well.

Another eerie aspect is that today is almost an exact replica of that day. It was a Tuesday, and the weather was absolutely perfect – both here and in New York. I have to admit that there’s a small part of me that hates trudging into the city on this anniversary, though that may just be a bit of paranoia.

Mary De Voe
Tuesday, September 11, AD 2012 10:05am

The terrorists got 40 of their promised virgins that day on flight 93, that day, 9/11. The virgins’ names are Freedom, Liberty, Truth and JUSTICE. when I stop weeping, when I stop crying, when I stop praying. God bless America, the United States, all 57 of them, the American flag hanging on my porch, our men in uniform. Freedom, Liberty, Truth and Justice. Liberty Walking, Freedom crying, Truth praying, Justice dying

Mary De Voe
Tuesday, September 11, AD 2012 10:06am

Paul: and your cure.

Elaine Krewer
Admin
Tuesday, September 11, AD 2012 5:28pm

“today is almost an exact replica of that day. It was a Tuesday and the weather was absolutely perfect”

Same here in Central Illinois; the only difference being that when I got home from work there WERE multiple jet trails in the sky, instead of just one (from Air Force One). However, I just found out there is currently a huge smoke plume visible on the National Weather Service radar in Chicago — from a huge brush fire in La Salle County, Illinois, not far from where I grew up. The brush fire may have started from a cigarette thrown out a car window, so, be careful out there campers!

Elaine Krewer
Admin
Tuesday, September 11, AD 2012 5:36pm

Re previous comment: thank goodness the smoke over my hometown is just from a brush fire and not from a downed plane as it was over Shanksville, Pa., that awful day. Flight 93 could have happened anywhere. God bless all the heroes of that day.

Don the Kiwi
Don the Kiwi
Wednesday, September 12, AD 2012 3:58am

My countymen were with you, one on Flight 93, and others in the twin towers.
We also feel your grief and your pain still, now years gone by, though we are far removed.
These events are still very raw for those who recognise these attacks as an attack on our cultural and religious survival.

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