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HISTORY This Week

9/11: Rescue on the Water

HISTORY This Week

The HISTORY® Channel | Back Pocket Studios

History, Society & Culture

4.54.2K Ratings

🗓️ 6 September 2021

⏱️ 27 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

September 11, 2001. On a clear and sunny day, Captain Richard Thornton is piloting his ferry boat back and forth between New Jersey and New York City. But when he hears an airplane flying too low to the ground, he knows something is wrong. After the World Trade Center’s North Tower is struck, Thornton instinctively drives his ship down towards Lower Manhattan. He will soon be joined by countless other marine craft: ferries, fishing boats, tugboats, and more. With the roads, bridges, and trains that connect the island of Manhattan to the rest of the world shut down, this collection of civilian, commercial, and military boats manages to carry more than 500,000 survivors to safety. How did this impromptu evacuation, which was larger than Dunkirk during WWII, come together? And how does one ferry boat captain reflect on the shared sense of duty he felt on that fateful day?

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Transcript

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0:00.0

The History Channel, original podcast.

0:04.0

History this week, September 11th, 2001.

0:08.0

All available votes. This is the night stage Coast Guard.

0:11.0

And we know where to help with the fact we should blow Manhattan,

0:14.0

reporting covers Island.

0:16.0

I'm Sally Helm.

0:21.0

It can be easy to forget that Manhattan is an island.

0:26.0

Even when you're right by the water.

0:28.0

There's traffic, tour buses full of kids in matching t-shirts,

0:32.0

commuters rushing past you, heads down, running late.

0:35.0

You can hear seagulls and waves in the background, but barely.

0:41.0

I was by the water recently, talking to Captain Rick Thornton.

0:45.0

He drives a ferry boat every day.

0:47.0

The commuter run. We hawk in New Jersey to Midtown Manhattan.

0:51.0

He's been in this job for decades.

0:53.0

And as we were chatting about his work,

0:55.0

we kept getting interrupted.

0:58.0

And then...

1:01.0

Ooh, crashing.

1:03.0

Yes, it sounds so...

1:05.0

It's the romance of the sea.

1:07.0

It's slapping of a sailboat,

...

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