On Saturday morning, July 28, 1945, a veteran Army pilot took off in a
B-25 light bomber from Bedford, Massachusetts, headed for Newark, New
Jersey, the co-pilot and a young sailor hitching a ride were also
aboard. Fog made visibility poor. About an hour later, people on the
streets of midtown Manhattan became aware of the rapidly increasing roar
of a plane and watched with horror as a bomber suddenly appeared out of
the clouds, dodged between skyscrapers, and then plunged into the side
of the Empire State Building. Pieces of plane and building fell like
hail. A gaping hole was gouged in the 78th floor, one of the plane’s two
engines hurtled through seven walls and came out the opposite side of
the building, and the other engine shot through an elevator shaft,
severing the cables and sending the car plummeting to the basement. When
the plane’s fuel tank exploded, six floors were engulfed in flame, and
burning gasoline streamed down the sides of the building. Fortunately,
few offices were open on a Saturday, and only 11 people – plus the three
occupants of the plane – died.
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