![]() ![]() It took eight seconds for Tower 1 to fall, accordioning into a mound of burning rubble many have likened to hell. ![]() Pushing and cajoling them down and out Pitch was in the 7th floor stairwell when a sound like thunder was heard from above. 14 minutes had elapsed since the collapse of Tower 2. Pitch ordered his men to stop and form a human bucket brigade to thrust the civilians out of the building, and blue uniforms lined the stairwell. When he ordered them out, out, OUT! wheelchairs began to roll to the door these were the workers too old, crippled or weak to have made their way out on their own. After 8 minutes when they reached floor 12 Pitch was met with a horrifying sight: more than 50 civilians sitting mutely at desks seemed immobilised in his flashlight's glare. From his knowledge of the Towers gained during service after the 1993 WTC bombing Pitch was able to lead the firefighters to an alternate stairwell and the descent continued. Firefighters under his command staged an orderly retreat until word came that the stairwell was blocked with debris. Out of radio communication with the command centre and with no time t o reflect Pitch ordered the evacuation of Tower 1. Pitch and his men were on the 17th floor racing upward when the world seemed to explode around them. On September 11th, leading seven companies of firefighters up the B stairway to Tower 1 of the World Trade Centre, Battalion Commander Richard 'Pitch' Picciotto was the highest ranking fire department commander in the twin towers when Tower 2 fell. ![]() 1 bestselling true story of Battalion Commander Richard Picciotto who, on 11 September, survived the collapse of the North Tower of the World Trade Center. ![]()
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