Saturday, September 10, 2011
 
sponsored by

THE DAY THAT SHOCKED THE WORLD

Tim and Liana McCormick remember 9/11

Part 1

Send a link to a friend

[September 10, 2011]  On Sept. 11, 2001, millions of Americans started their day just like any other day. They rose from their beds, had their morning coffee, perhaps read the paper or turned on the television for the morning news, and then prepared themselves to go about another ordinary fall day.

HardwareBut soon everything would change, and that day would become one of the most extraordinary days in the history of our country.

Following is an account of the day according to Lincoln couple Tim and Liana McCormick. Tim was in Lincoln that day, Liana in New York, just a few blocks from the World Trade Center.

___

Tim McCormick arose that morning with great expectations of it being a very nice day. He recalled the sun was shining in Logan County, the weather was perfect.

As he went about his morning routine, a few things were out of place, though. First, he woke alone, as his wife, Liana, was out of town on business. She was scheduled to return to Illinois from New York City that day, and it was something to look forward to.

Next he discovered that he had no running water in the house.

Water

"Because of that, I had things to do that I didn't usually do. And, I started my day not turning on the television and not listening to the news," McCormick said.

Instead, he went to investigate the water problem, found a broken pipe and water spewing in places it shouldn't be. He called for a plumber and waited for that person to arrive and resolve the problem.

Looking back on it now, McCormick said it was an odd thing. Living in one of the city's oldest historic homes, the Hoblit House, built in the mid-1800s, McCormick said he'd never had an issue with the plumbing until that day, and he hasn't had an issue with it since.

McCormick remembers the day clearly, and the shock he experienced when his phone rang and it was Liana on the other end.

"The first thing she said was, 'I'm all right, I'm all right,' but I didn't know what was wrong," her husband said.

As his wife described to him the events taking place just a few blocks from the hotel where she had stayed, the calamity of a broken water pipe became a mere inconvenience compared with the life-threatening situation his wife now faced.

___

Liana McCormick awoke on the morning of Sept. 11 as a guest at the Marriott Hotel on Lexington Avenue in New York. Located on the island of Manhattan, she was just a few blocks from the World Trade Center.

She remembers it as starting out to be a perfect day. From her room she could see the sky was a clear blue and bright. She still has vivid memories of the sights and smells of the city as she left the hotel, stepping out onto the steps of the building.

Internet

"New York is a walking city. In the morning the sidewalks are filled with people," Liana said. "There are a number of little coffee shops and bakeries, and people stop in for something as they walk. When you step outside, you can smell all the good smells of coffee and vanilla and sweets."

She then added, "It was a perfect fall day, the kind of day when you would think nothing could possibly go wrong."

A representative for a major pharmaceutical company, with her office in Bloomington, Liana had traveled to New York to attend a grand opening party for a good client who was opening a new practice in the city. She had attended the event the night before and was now anxious to get to LaGuardia Airport and fly back home.

Standing on the steps of the Marriott, she waited for the private car provided by her company to come and take her to the airport.

[to top of second column]

In a city of skyscrapers, one has to look straight up to catch glimpses of the sky. She remembers looking up, and she remembers what she saw was not the clear blue sky she had seen earlier.

Instead she caught glimpses of a heavy dark cloud with a greenish hue. Living on the Illinois prairie for over 20 years, she likened it to a stormy, almost tornado-like sky.

Concerned about the weather, she stepped back into the lobby of the hotel, hoping to catch a forecast on the television, but instead what she learned was that a plane had crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center. The heavy cloud she saw was actually smoke emitting from that crash.

For Liana, it was a tragic accident, but there was nothing she could do about it. Her mind was still on getting to the airport and getting home to Lincoln.

Back outside, her driver arrived. He was a retired police officer who now owned his own car service. Liana had been to New York before and had him as her driver. But this time, he was different from normal. She recalls that instead of being his usual polite self, he practically shoved her into the back seat of the car, telling her, "We have to get out of here." He threw the luggage into the trunk and headed away from the hotel.

At that point, neither one of them knew what exactly was happening, but the New York-savvy former police officer did know how emergency services would respond to this horrible accident. His hopes of getting Liana to the airport rested on getting off Manhattan Island before traffic became gridlocked with emergency vehicles.

___

When Liana called Tim, saying she was all right, he hurried to switch on the television. He then could see for himself the dramatic scenes she was describing to him over the phone.

At that time, the second plane had not yet hit the World Trade Center's south tower, and both Tim and Liana believed they had witnessed a terrible accident.

"I thought it was a commuter plane or a private plane -- a pilot who'd gotten lost or made a terrible mistake," Tim said.

With New York being a hub for all the major networks, news cameras were focused in on the World Trade Center literally within a minute or two of the incident, and they remained focused there.

With a thousand miles between them, Tim and Liana witnessed the same horrifying scene -- he on television, she in person -- as the second American Airlines passenger plane dove into the south tower.

Tim, Liana and her driver all knew in an instant -- one plane could be an accident, two could not. Something horrible was happening right before their eyes, and they were helpless to stop it, unable to avoid it.

[By NILA SMITH]

Library

< Top Stories index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching and Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law and Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health and Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor