![]() The plane ripped a path across floors 94 to 98, directly into the office of Marsh & McLennan, shredding steel columns, wallboard, filing cabinets and computer-laden desks. At that speed, it covered the final two blocks to the North Tower in 1.2 seconds. American Airlines Flight 11, a Boeing 767 carrying 10,000 gallons of fuel was moving at 470mph. It was 8.44 am.Ġ8:48 - North Tower, 91st floor, Bureau of Shipping, 1 hour 42 minutes to collapse. The doors closed and the last people ever to leave Windows on the World began their descent. Nestor held the elevator, so they hopped in quickly. But Nestor had a meeting downstairs, so they headed for the elevators, stopping at Levin's table to say goodbye. He and Tierney were a little curious to see whom Levin, their boss, was meeting for breakfast. Upstairs, Levin read his newspaper, Nestor recalled. But when the guest arrived, the two luckily boarded the wrong elevator, so they had to return to the lobby to wait for another one. In the lobby, 107 floors below, an assistant to Levin waited for his breakfast guest. Stuart Lee and Garth Feeney, two vice-presidents of Data Synapse, ran displays of their company's software. Some exhibitors were already tending to their booths, set up in the Horizon Suite just across the hallway.Ī picture taken that morning showed two exhibitors, Peter Alderman and William Kelly, salesmen for Bloomberg LP, chatting with a colleague beside a table filled with a multi-screened computer display. Many were enjoying coffee and sliced smoked salmon in the restaurant's ballroom. Already 87 people had arrived, including top executives from Merrill Lynch and UBS Warburg. Most of the 72 Windows employees were on the 106th floor, where Risk Waters Group was holding a conference on information technology. Maciejewski was one of several restaurant workers on the 107th floor. But his secretary requested a table days earlier and now he sat waiting for a banker friend.Įvery minute or so a waiter, Jan Maciejewski, swept through the room refilling coffee cups and taking orders, Nestor recalls. He had never joined them for breakfast before. Sitting by himself at a window table overlooking the Statue of Liberty was a relative newcomer, Neil D Levin, executive director of the Port Authority. Roinnel says he asked Eng to give them to Harvey. The night before, one of the restaurant's managers, Jules Roinnel, had given Eng two impossibly hard-to-get Broadway tickets for The Producers. Eng had a treat for one of them, Emeric Harvey. ![]() At the next table sat Michael Nestor, deputy inspector-general of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, and one of his investigators, Richard Tierney.Īt a third table were six stockbrokers, several of whom came every Tuesday. Thompson, executive director of the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, was eating with Geoffrey Wharton, an executive with Silverstein Properties, which had just leased the towers. As much as any one place, that single room captured the sweep of humanity who worked and played at the World Trade Centre. Bedford grew up in Baltimore and attended the School of Visual Arts in New York.Familiar faces occupied many of the tables in Wild Blue, the intimate eyrie to Windows that Eng helped to manage. After returning to the States, he joined the staff of the Boston Globe as a photojournalist for three years, producing stories on politics, race and the opioid crisis before resuming his freelance career as both a photojournalist and a producer of short films for the likes of the BBC, CNN’s Great Big Story, Instagram and Yahoo. ![]() Bedford followed that up by spending three and a half years covering India and China. He believed he would be covering the first African American to become president of the United States. Bedford moved to Iowa with four colleagues for the better part of 2007 to follow Barack Obama’s campaign. Former Los Angeles Times photo editor Keith Bedford has spent the majority of his career in journalism as a freelancer, frequently contributing to the New York Times, Reuters, the Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg and covering everything from natural disasters to presidential politics. ![]()
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