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Twenty years later, two Minnesotans in New York City on 9/11 reflect on those moments

Sep 12, 2021 06:19AM ● By Editor
In this Sept. 11, 2001, file photo, smoke rises from the burning twin towers of the World Trade Center after hijacked planes crashed into the towers, in New York City. The coronavirus pandemic has reshaped how the U.S. is observing the anniversary of 9/11. The terror attacks' 19th anniversary will be marked Friday, Sept. 11, 2020, by dueling ceremonies at the Sept. 11 memorial plaza and a corner nearby in New York. AP Photo/Richard Drew, File


By Danny Spewak of KARE 11 News - September 10, 2021

Scott Meyer arrived in New York City around 3 a.m. on the early morning of September 11, 2001, hoping to catch a few hours of sleep at his hotel in Midtown Manhattan ahead of one of the most important days of his athletic career. 

The All-American goaltender from St. Cloud State, just five months removed from an NCAA Tournament appearance with the Huskies, came to the Big Apple seeking a roster spot with the NHL's New York Rangers. After signing with the franchise as a free agent out of college, he spent the summer and fall in rookie camp, whipping himself into shape for the start of full training camp on September 11 at the iconic Madison Square Garden. 


Scott Meyer had an All-American senior season at St. Cloud State in 2000-2001, helping his team capture a conference tournament title on the way to an NCAA Tournament appearance.  Photo: Credit: St. Cloud State Athletics

He needed a solid night of sleep before camp opened. 

By sunrise, roaring sirens interrupted his rest.

"Just kind of figured that was Manhattan," Meyer said, recalling that he had no knowledge of what prompted the emergency response. 

Soon enough, his girlfriend -- now wife, Missy -- called with an urgent demand. 

Turn on your TV.

"That," Meyer said, "is when I saw the first tower had been hit."

Details remained unclear, but Meyer felt uncomfortable on the 12th floor of his tall hotel, just a few miles away from the site of the World Trade Center. Before evacuating his building, he quickly hopped in the shower, during which time another plane slammed into the second tower. He got dressed, left his room, and rushed toward the elevator, where he encountered another hotel guest with a shocked look on her face. Meyer then headed toward Madison Square Garden on foot, deeming the area a safe zone because he knew he could at least gather with familiar teammates there. 

Twenty years later, Scott Meyer recalled the events of 9/11 in an interview with KARE 11.  Photo: 
Credit: KARE 11


"I didn't know what to do. I started walking west toward Madison Square Garden, but every street south, you could see the towers were burning. At one point I just stopped and started walking south, like a lot of people, in amazement of what was going on," Meyer said. "Cell phones wouldn't work, and there were a bunch of people crying. You obviously understand, so many people had family and friends they knew who were in those towers." 

The South Tower fell during his walk to the Garden.

"I didn't see it," Meyer said, "but you could feel it."

The sights and sounds have haunted Meyer, now a realtor in the Twin Cities, for the past 20 years. 

"There are still some confusing feelings," he said. "It does make you wonder how things have changed."

This week has been hard

St. Paul native David Kansas, now the president of American Public Media, worked as a journalist in New York City back in 2001. On the morning of September 11, he heard a jet fly over his apartment about a half-mile north of the World Trade Center, before it collided with the first tower around 8:46 a.m. EST. 

"Journalists, we run to where things are going. I decided I had to go down there," Kansas said. "I got on the elevator and made my way to the World Trade Center, walking as quickly as I could."

In the roughly sixteen minutes that elapsed between the first and second plane strikes, Kansas observed a bizarre scene unfolding on the streets of Lower Manhattan. Although smoke filled the air from the North Tower, many New Yorkers remained confused, some thinking it may have been an accident. As he rushed toward the destruction, Kansas looked up to see clear blue skies, with wind blowing slightly to the southeast, watching in amazement as people forged ahead with mundane tasks. Some walked to work, coffee in hand. Others picked up garbage.

"Like nothing had really happened," Kansas said. "It was a really weird moment between times."

Kansas, meanwhile, talked with his brother on the phone on his way to the World Trade Center, where he could see people falling from the North Tower. Their conversation continued into 9:02 a.m. EST.

"Then a huge plume of fire blew through the South Tower, which was the second plane," Kansas said. "I ran through a building to get to safety. And, at that moment, I knew it wasn't an accident -- that we were under attack."

Kansas described a mix of confusion and sadness in the hours that followed. He informed his family that he was safe, but he wondered about many friends who might be in danger. He tried to track some of them down, although with poor cell phone coverage, he reverted to the now-archaic instant messenger as his primary form of communication.

"There was also an effort to evacuate the neighborhood, but I thought, 'Where was safe? Where was safe?'" he said. "So, I stayed put, hunkered down, and kind of rode it out."

Stuck in his apartment, Kansas put his thoughts into words. An acquaintance from the Star Tribune in his home state, who had covered Kansas during his high school football career in St. Paul, called him that day and asked if he would write an 800-word article for the newspaper's special edition. 

Working on a quick, two-hour deadline, Kansas penned a moment-by-moment account of the September 11th attacks from his perspective in Lower Manhattan. The story ran the next morning on Page S7 under the headline, "'I Will Never Forget The Sight.'"


Journalist David Kansas, now the president of American Public Media, wrote an article for the Star Tribune that ran in the paper's special edition on September 12, 2001.  Photo: Credit: KARE 11 

Noting that he had also experienced the 1993 World Trade Center bombing from his Wall Street Journal offices across the street, Kansas told readers in the Twin Cities that he felt "numbness" and "helplessness" as the towers collapsed to the ground. He had no real sense of the death toll, knowing only that "given the density of people, the people on the planes and the collapse of the building it's hard to fathom."

"New York is a stern place with resolute people. What I saw Tuesday only reinforced that feeling," Kansas wrote in his final paragraph. "But I don't think any of us have any idea what the coming days will bring."

He would soon learn that a friend and former co-worker, who was employed at Cantor Fitzgerald's headquarters in the North Tower, had died along with more than 600 fellow employees at the firm.

Kansas suffered from nightmares in the years after the 9/11 attacks, although he said they eventually passed with time.

Now comes Saturday's twentieth anniversary.

"This week has been hard," Kansas said. "Just remembering it again, remembering friends who had struggled through different impacts of it, just remembering how terrible that time was to be in Lower Manhattan. To see people falling from the towers, the flames -- and a few days later, the fighter jets and tanks on your street -- that all coming back has been difficult." 

On Friday, a day before the 20-year mark, Kansas dug up the old Star Tribune article that ran under his byline on September 12, 2001, and read the words with his two young children.

"I just tried to answer questions for them," he said. "Trying to explain the complexity of the world in the context of what happened that day, which is still very complex."


To see the original story and read related articles, follow this link to the KARE 11 News website.  https://www.kare11.com/article/news/local/two-minnesotans-in-new-york-city-on-911-reflect-on-those-m...

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