WVPB Staff Remember 9/11

Monday marks the 22nd anniversary of the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001. Most of us have an “I remember where I was” story from that day of watching the planes crash into buildings and the horror we all felt.

This year marks the 22nd anniversary of the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001. Most of us have an “I remember where I was” story from that day of watching the planes crash into buildings and the horror we felt. The world changed that day.

Nearly 3,000 people died in New York City, Washington, D.C. and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania. 

To commemorate the day, several West Virginia Public Broadcasting staffers contributed to this audio postcard. 

Annie Thompson, media sales associate: I’m sitting there alone, looking at images on the TV and listening to what was going on. It filled me with terror and emotion of what had happened. And also disbelief, just not believing that this could happen in America.

Bill Lynch, producer of Inside Appalachia: We sat around the radio in the office and listened for updates. And then I tried to call my ex-wife in Baltimore, I was worried about my kids. Of course, I couldn’t get through. The phone lines were jammed up with people like me calling family and friends or whatever. I worried a lot. I didn’t hear anything from my ex until maybe a day or so later. I think she might have sent me an email just to let me know things were okay. She was scared. It was like that everywhere. I think we were all scared and wondering what was going to happen next.

Emily Rice, Appalachia Health News reporter: Being a kid from West Virginia, my only assumption was that a coal mine or power plant must be on fire. I ran downstairs to ask my best friend’s mom what was happening, and she sat us down with bowls of cereal to try to explain. She said some very bad people had done some very bad things and hurt people in a place called New York City. It would take months and years for my child brain to comprehend the tragedy. I remember when the death toll was released and wondering how to quantify 3,000 people’s lives lost.

Curtis Tate, energy and environment reporter: On that crystal clear day of September 11, 2001, I was hardly on the front lines of the nation’s pain and sorrow. Yet, I still felt that. I was a 22-year-old journalism student at the University of Kentucky. Because of a late night shift on my part-time retail job, I didn’t even know what had happened until I found out why my midday class was canceled. 

I did, however, worry instantly about my 16-year-old sister. Melanie was a page in the House of Representatives in Washington. On an ordinary Tuesday, she would have been at her page school in the Library of Congress before dawn. And then by mid-morning performing her regular duties across the street at the Capitol. One of them was raising a U.S. flag above the House chamber. I never thought my sister, whose life was probably saved by the passengers and crew of Flight 93, would face a breast cancer diagnosis at age 32. And with a young child, I never thought we’d lose her to that cancer at 34, leaving her daughter and the rest of us to move forward in a world we never thought we’d have to contemplate. Yes, 9/11 changed all of us who are old enough to remember, we learned to conceive what we could not conceive. And that we should never take anything for granted.

Kristi Morey, director of Marketing: I do vividly remember seeing the first plane hit the tower. And you know, like everyone just wondering how could that happen? How could that happen? And so, I continued watching and then after the second plane hit, I remember just getting really emotional and calling my mother because that’s what we do. Right? We call our mom and say, “What’s going on? Is this the end of the world?”

Eric Douglas, news director: The Pentagon is a beautiful memorial, especially in the evening, the way it’s lit and the flags waving. And just the hush in the air. The Ground Zero Memorial is much the same way. It feels like holy ground. It feels like an instant wave of reverence washes over you because you know what it represents, you know the lives lost, you know the terror that those people felt and that all of us felt. It’s something that I hope we never do forget. 

Caroline MacGregor, assistant news director: I remember my flight touched down in Amsterdam. And as I walked through the terminal of a familiar airport, everything suddenly seemed different. People were different, that sense of dread and unknowing hitting the world standing in line to board the KLM flight to Detroit. I remember security at the gate was at an all-time high. There was a sense of collective consciousness; everyone was numb, confused, but on high alert, looking sideways at their fellow passengers with an abnormal level of suspicion.

It was a surreal experience as we were accompanied by air marshals for the trip home. Landing in America, well, that was when I realized the world had really changed and travel would never be the same again. But more than that, so many people who met horrific deaths at the hands of people who hate, a memory one wants to forget, but should never forget.

Chris Schulz, education reporter: It really was such an inflection point in all of our lives and especially in the D.C. area. Very soon after that, we had security scare after security scare from the anthrax attacks to the D.C. sniper. And it was several years of very heightened concern, very heightened attention to security, as the war on terror developed and all those things came to be but even to this day, you know, the the security that we go through at airports and the military and pseudo military presence that we see on public transportation. All of that is a result of what happened that day.

Maggie Holley, director of Education: I was attending college at Morehead State University and as I walked down campus toward my morning class, I quickly realized something was wrong. Everyone was in a hushed rush or a state of confusion. As we were all ushered back to the dorms, it was announced that all classes were canceled for the rest of the day. But it wasn’t until I made it back to my room that I saw what had happened. I will never forget the horrific images on the news. My three roommates and I took turns calling our parents to check in. And to confirm what we were seeing on the 24-inch television screen was an actual reality. The world was forever changed.

Chris Barnhart, director of Video Production: I think it is important to recognize that it wasn’t a sense of patriotism or rah rah America, that I have to go off and fight this war. I enlisted before the war started. But I think that moment, those hours in the morning of September 11, 2001, part of my focus overall into we’re not alone, we’re all one people. What happens three states away impacts me here at home.

So on 9/11, I grew up. I wasn’t just a 26-year-old college student drop out over and over again until I finally graduated. I was somebody who was joining a purpose that was bigger than himself. While 9/11 created a lot of fog and confusion and fear in the world at large, I think for me, it provided focus and direction. And while I wish that it never happened, I think that it was a moment in our history where we can look upon it and go, “What have you done since?” as opposed to “What would you have done instead?”


Gov. Jim Justice has ordered state and U.S. flags at state facilities be flown at half-staff from dawn to dusk Monday. Justice also requests that all West Virginians observe a moment of silence Monday at 8:46 a.m. to honor the innocent victims who perished on September 11, 2001.

An Audio Postcard Remembering 9/11 And WVU Alums Rally Behind Faculty, Students On This West Virginia Morning

On this West Virginia Morning, this year marks the 22nd anniversary of the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001. Most of us have an “I remember where I was” story from that day as many of us watched the planes crash into buildings, and the horror we felt. The world changed that day.

On this West Virginia Morning, this year marks the 22nd anniversary of the terrorist attack on September 11, 2001. Most of us have an “I remember where I was” story from that day as many of us watched the planes crash into buildings, and the horror we felt. The world changed that day.

Nearly 3,000 people died in New York City, Washington, D.C. and in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

To commemorate the day, several West Virginia Public Broadcasting staffers contributed to this audio postcard. We’ll hear from Annie Thompson, Bill Lynch, Emily Rice, Kristi Morey, Curtis Tate, Eric Douglas, Caroline MacGregor, Chris Schulz, Maggie Holley and Chris Barnhart.

Also, in this show, alumni of West Virginia University rallied in Morgantown Saturday in support of faculty and students. Chris Schulz has more.

And the woman who sparked the 1974 Kanawha County Textbook Controversy has died.  82-year-old Alice Whitehurst Moore passed away at her home in Tennessee. Us & Them host Trey Kay has this remembrance.

West Virginia Morning is a production of West Virginia Public Broadcasting which is solely responsible for its content.

Support for our news bureaus comes from Concord University and Shepherd University.

Our Appalachia Health News project is made possible with support from CAMC and Marshall Health.

West Virginia Morning is produced with help from Bill Lynch, Briana Heaney, Caroline MacGregor, Chris Schultz, Curtis Tate, Emily Rice, Eric Douglas, Liz McCormick, and Randy Yohe.

Caroline MacGregor is our assistant news director and produced this episode.

Listen to West Virginia Morning weekdays at 7:43 a.m. on WVPB Radio or subscribe to the podcast and never miss an episode. #WVMorning

W.Va. Remembrance Events Honor 9/11 Victims

Events are set to take place across West Virginia this weekend in remembrance of the victims of 9/11. 2022 marks 21 years since the attack, which claimed the lives of at least five people with ties to the state.

Events are set to take place across West Virginia this weekend in remembrance of the victims of 9/11. 2022 marks 21 years since the attack, which claimed the lives of at least five people with ties to the state.

One event being held in Princeton Sept. 10 is a memorial stair climb up 110 stories, organized by the Princeton Fire Department. It’s the second annual climb, with the first organized for the 20th anniversary last year. For first responders like Lt. Rick Shagoury, the event carries personal weight.

“We lost 343 firefighters and all these first responders. And being a first responder, it just hits home,” Shagoury said.

Registration for the climb is from 6 a.m. to 8 a.m., with the climb itself starting at Hunnicutt Field at 9 a.m. and continuing until 1 p.m.

In Huntington, a vigil at the Healing Field at Spring Hill Cemetery is set up through Tuesday. Huntington native Paul Ambrose, who was on the flight that was crashed into the Pentagon, is buried there. Cemetery operations manager Eldora McCoy said these vigils have meaning for every local community affected.

“As other communities do theirs in their own way, this is our way to remember,” McCoy said.

Flags can be purchased at the cemetery for $35, with proceeds going to the cemetery’s Memorial Bell Tower fund. The vigil is also next to the site’s World Trade Center Artifact Memorial, which was constructed in 2017 from steel rails found at the site of the attack in New York. A ceremony is also set to take place at the cemetery at 2 p.m. Sunday.

Educational assemblies are also scheduled at schools around the state this week, including one at Westwood Middle School.

“Our students weren’t born yet when 9/11 occurred, so this opportunity is about raising awareness and bringing to life for them a very important moment in American history,” Westwood Principal John Conrad said in a news release.

Sen. Joe Manchin recognized the anniversary in a statement Friday.

“Each American grieved and felt the shock of our national vulnerability following the attacks, but we also experienced something else as a nation – our country learned of the great strength, bravery and character of our heroes who inspire us to this day. In the aftermath, we came together as a nation, showing we were united, resilient, and courageous in the face of tragedy,” Manchin said.

Alongside Ambrose, four others connected to the state died during the attacks, including Mary Lou Hague, Chris Gray, Jim Samuel and Shelly Marshall.

Stranded on 9/11, One Man Was Moved To Start a Pay It Forward Foundation To Encourage Kindness

A non-profit organization is hoping people will mark the 20th anniversary of 9-11 with acts of kindness.

PayitForward 911 is a few days into the 11 days of Kindness and Unity campaign. The organization promotes acts of kinds on Sept. 11 but wanted to expand the project to mark 20 years since planes hit the World Trade Center buildings in New York. The project all started when a man experienced extreme generosity the days after Sept. 11.

U.S. airways were closed for five days after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. Planes that were flying back to the states on that fateful morning had to find another place to land.

In total, more 7,000 passengers from 90 countries found refuge in Canada’s Gander, Newfoundland. The small province and its 9,000 residents rallied in a radical outpouring of kindness, opening their homes to shelter, clothe and feed their international guests.

Among them was environmental communications executive Kevin Tuerff, whose story of finding kindness and refuge in Canada after his plane was diverted on 9-11 was so compelling that it became part of a Broadway play — “Come From Away.” Tuerff also wrote a book of his story and how it changed his life called “Channel of Peace.”

Tuerff, who spoke with West Virginia Public Broadcasting, was so moved by the hospitality on 9-11, that in 2002, he began an annual tradition to “pay it forward” and return the kindness he had been shown.

After 9-11 happened, some people were angry and many times felt helpless as the nation weathered a significant blow of terrorism on its own shores. Tuerff says this notion — to practice random acts of kindness on a tough day — has helped to give people hope.

“It doesn’t change the history of what happened on that terrible day,” Tuerff said. “But it gives them something positive to do. Because that’s what Gander was on that horrific day. The people of Newfoundland, Canada, were a shining example of humanity.

“They made the decision to let us off the planes and come into the community. And then we became like refugees — we needed food, we needed clothing, shelter, information. And they provided all of that with love and kindness.”

Courtesy
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Kevin Tuerff (2001) at a community college in Gander, Canada, in the classroom where he slept on the floor with strangers, wearing clothes found at the local Wal-Mart.

When he returned home to Texas, Tuerff wondered if there would be a community that would do the same for thousands of stranded passengers.

“What they did with the radical hospitality towards everyone was so inclusive,” Tuerff said, “and so that meant that there were people who were getting off the plane such as Muslims from Arab countries, for example. I don’t think that would have happened here in Texas, people would have said, ‘Yeah, we’ll let some of you in, but not all of you.’ But these people, they took a risk. Because they said they believe in the Golden Rule. They said “treat others like you want to be treated.”

Tuerff’s non-profit PayitForward 911 is asking businesses, schools, houses of worship, along with nonprofits and civic groups to get involved this year.

The organization started a campaign called 11 days of Kindness and Unity. Tuerff says they are hoping that people pay it forward with kind gestures for 11 days, leading up to Sept. 11.

“It doesn’t have to cost money,” Tuerff points out. “You can open the door for a stranger or let someone cut in front of you in traffic. Those are things that are free.”

Sept. 11 Postcards: Memories Of That Fateful Day

A Brother Worried For A Teen Sister Working at the U.S. Capitol

By Curtis Tate

On the crystal clear day of Sept. 11, 2001, I was hardly on the front lines of the nation’s pain and sorrow. Yet I still felt it.

I was a 22-year-old journalism student at the University of Kentucky, after a failed attempt at another degree at another university. Because of a late-night shift on my part-time retail job, I didn’t even know what had happened until I found out why my midday class was canceled.

I did, however, worry instantly about my 16-year-old sister.

Melanie was a page in the House of Representatives in Washington. On an ordinary Tuesday, she would have been at her page school in the Library of Congress before dawn. And then by mid-morning, performing her regular duties across the street at the Capitol. One of them was raising a U.S. flag above the House chamber.

It pained me that she was in harm’s way, and I wasn’t.

We’ve long believed we can thank the passengers and crew of United Flight 93 for sparing her and others at the Capitol that day. They took back the plane from the hijackers, and it crashed at a reclaimed coal mine site near Shanksville, Pennsylvania. Everyone on board was killed.

On that day, and in the days after, like many of my fellow Americans, I struggled to conceive the inconceivable. The attackers were able to hijack four commercial airliners? They were able to destroy the World Trade Center and severely damage the Pentagon? It simply made no sense.

In the intervening two decades, though, I have had to conceive a lot of inconceivable things.

We launched wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and stayed bogged down in those places for years, at a cost of thousands of American lives, trillions of dollars and our standing in the world.

A major American city, New Orleans, drowned in the aftermath of a hurricane, and that was only a preview of destructive weather events yet to come, driven by climate change.

The U.S. economy cratered, and millions of lives were shattered, because we put too much faith in the stock market, fueled by a housing boom that was really a house of cards.

We elected America’s first Black president. But we also elected someone who represented a backlash to that change.

We saw the U.S. Capitol attacked violently, not by foreign terrorists, but by fellow Americans.

In more personal terms, I never thought the U.S. Supreme Court would make it possible for me to marry my partner.

I also never thought that marriage would end in divorce, and at the worst possible time.

I never thought I’d become a reporter at the same Capitol that was spared on 9/11, only to be attacked on Jan. 6.

I never thought my sister, whose life was probably saved by the passengers and crew of Flight 93, would face a breast cancer diagnosis at age 32, and with a young child.

I never thought we’d lose her to that cancer at 34, leaving her daughter and the rest of us to move forward in a world we never thought we’d have to contemplate.

Yes, 9/11 changed all of us who are old enough to remember. We learned to conceive what we could not conceive. And that we should never take anything for granted.

Writing Stories of Heartbreak, Courage As a Reporter Working In Washington, D.C.

By Andrea Billups

I was a reporter in Washington, D.C. on 9-11. As thousands of cars drove away from the city in a frantic escape that morning, the Pentagon in smoke and flames — I drove in alone, fearing for myself and the uncertainty. Like most Americans, I was asking as I watched the giant neon signs on the Beltway urge me to stay away — what is happening here? In my lifetime, I had never known war, as it were, on my own soil.

In the years hence, I have continued to work in media and have also taught journalism at five universities. I always tell my students — one day, the news is going to write itself right up to your doorstep. So you better be ready.

Sept. 11 was such a day.

In recent years, our media has gotten much criticism — some of it deserved, a lot fomented by people who choose to get their information and form their opinions from social media.

But in the midst of this act of terror 20 years ago, I saw many of us who work in the news business rise to do the work. And do it with honor. Never was I more proud of my colleagues.

I remember my editor, Ken Hanner, who was unshakable, moving through a long day and weeks with measure and resolve. On your toughest day in a newsroom, or any job completed in crisis, you want a leader just like that. I have never forgotten how he carried himself for us all. The sky was falling but we would not.

I also remember those who shared their stories with me in the day and weeks after this tragedy. And I want to say that it remains the deepest honor, to hear people with such emotion take the time to share what happened to them with the world.

I remember most a gentleman who was inside one of those Twin Towers in NYC when the plane hit. He managed to ascend the stairs and get out. Then he walked, covered in soot, across the Brooklyn Bridge as he made his way home. He was still processing it as he talked with me, just hours after his life could have very well ended. Many of his co-workers died. It was jarring and painful, but he was one of the lucky ones. He was breathless in fear, and anguished as he came to realize how close he came to death.

I also recall a gentleman who played a university carillon. Who simply left his home that morning, climbed the tower on campus to his organ. And began to bang out every patriotic song he knew. Because it was the only thing he could do, his grief and heartbreak pouring from his fingers into his instrument. He said he played — for America.

On the fourth day after the attack — it hit me. After multiple 12-hour days. I was in the shower when the tears finally came. I was too busy reporting to allow myself that space and feeling. But it welled up and came out in deep, chest-heaving gasps. My God, the stories I heard. And told.

My God — my country.

It’s often tough. To listen and share stories of grief. But that’s the mission. Most of us consider it just that — and still believe in journalism’s dignity.

This postcard isn’t meant as a defense of media. But hopefully a reminder of all of the investigative reporting that followed the 9-11 attacks that shed light about the motive and ideology of the perpetrators. And the steps we needed to keep us all safer.

I’ll never forget everyone, from my fellow reporters to the people on the streets, who rose to the challenge and showed us in that era, what our collective mettle was all about.

It was a horrible day, filled with so much uncertainty and sadness. But 20 years later, I’m still a journalist. America is weathering a different collective storm. And I remember most how our nation in that moment on 9-11, showcased its humanity and goodness.

Evil people might have attacked us. But they could never kill our exceptional spirit, the very heartbeat that leads many from around the world to come to our shores for a taste of freedom.

I believe that indomitable spirit still lives in all of us.

Us and Them : A Suburb of Hell

For a little more than a century, there’s been at least one concentration camp somewhere on earth. The fact that camps still exist and that humans can justify forcing other humans into such inhumane living conditions is the “us and them” dynamic taken to the most vile extreme.

For this episode, Trey interviews journalist Andrea Pitzer, author of One Long Night: A Global History of Concentration Camps. She says that the legacy of camps started in Cuba and continues there to this day.

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