Houston Chronicle

Flight 93 visitor center ‘tells incredible story of heroism’

Pennsylvan­ia museum pays tribute to those who fought hijackers

- By Michael Rubinkam

SHANKSVILL­E, Pa. — Gordon Felt knew his brother was sitting directly in front of two of the terrorists who hijacked United Airlines Flight 93.

But it “never really hit me,” Felt said, until he walked through the new, immersive visitor center at the Flight 93 National Memorial. There it was, the seating chart with his sibling’s name on it: Edward Felt, first class, second row.

“It kind of came crashing back,” said Felt, whose brother took part in a passenger revolt that brought the plane down in a southweste­rn Pennsylvan­ia field. “Those feelings that were always there — the emotion, the anger, the sense of loss — really are drawn back to the surface.”

Sitting on a hill overlookin­g the crash site near Shanksvill­e, the $26 million visitor center complex will be dedicated and opened to the public on Thursday, one day before the annual 9/11 observance­s in Pennsylvan­ia, New York and Washington. Victims’ family members got a private tour on Wednesday.

The center uses photos, video, artifacts and interactiv­e displays to tell the story of Flight 93, the only jetliner among the four commandeer­ed by terrorists that failed to reach its intended target on Sept. 11, 2001. Two planes crashed into the World Trade Center towers in New York and one slammed into the Pentagon. More than 3,000 people died.

The center’s 10 exhibits are laid out chronologi­cally, with visitors learning how the 33 passengers and seven crew members — at least some of them already aware the nation was under attack — voted to charge the cockpit and then fought to regain control of the plane, whose hijackers are believed to have wanted to crash it into the U.S. Capitol.

“You are seeing an incredible story of heroism, a piece of American history playing out in front of you as you are walking through this exhibit that gives perspectiv­e on the day,” said Felt, president of Families of Flight 93.

One video traces the aircraft’s erratic movements in real time, fading to black at the moment of impact. Bits and pieces of the debris field are displayed under glass.

Picking up a handset, visitors can listen to recordings of the voice messages that two passengers and a flight attendant left for family members minutes before the plane went down.

“I’m on United 93 and it’s been hijacked by terrorists who say they have a bomb,” passenger Linda Gronlund, calling her sister Elsa, begins matter-of-factly. “Apparently they have flown a couple of planes into the World Trade Center already, and it looks like they’re going to take this one down as well.”

She breaks down sobbing: “Mostly I just wanted to say I love you, and I’m going to miss you.”

The money for the visitor center complex was raised from 120,000 private donors, along with contributi­ons from the state and the federal government.

Developmen­t of the Flight 93 National Memorial is nearly complete, with only the planned Tower of Voices, a 93-foot structure with 40 wind chimes,still to be built.

 ?? Nicole Bengiveno / New York Times ?? The $26 million visitor center and museum in Shanksvill­e, Pa., which documents the crash of Flight 93, the jetliner hijacked by terrorists aiming for Washington, D.C., opens on Thursday, 14 years after Sept. 11, 2001.
Nicole Bengiveno / New York Times The $26 million visitor center and museum in Shanksvill­e, Pa., which documents the crash of Flight 93, the jetliner hijacked by terrorists aiming for Washington, D.C., opens on Thursday, 14 years after Sept. 11, 2001.

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