-
6:02
a.m.: Mohammed
Atta flies Colgan Air from Portland International Jetport, Portland, Maine
to Logan International Airport, Boston, Massachusetts, along with Abdulaziz
al-Omari.
-
6:45
a.m.: Atta and
Omari arrive at Boston's Logan Airport.
-
6:52
a.m.: Marwan al-Shehhi,
the hijacker of Flight 175, calls Atta from another terminal at Logan to
confirm that the attacks are on.
-
7:35
a.m.: Atta and al-Omari board American Airlines
Flight 11.
-
7:39
a.m.: The rest of the American Airlines Flight 11
hijackers board the plane.
-
7:59
a.m.: American Airlines Flight 11, a Boeing 767,
departs late from Logan International Airport bound for Los Angeles,
California. Five hijackers are aboard.
-
8:13
a.m.: The last radio
communication is made from Flight 11. A recording of what is believed to be
Atta's voice says, "Nobody move. Everything will be OK. If you try to
make any moves, you'll endanger yourself and the airplane. Just stay
quiet." The flight path begins to stray away from the scheduled one and
moves southwards.
-
8:14
a.m.: United Airlines Flight 175, another
fully-fueled Boeing 767, carrying 56 passengers and nine crew members,
departs from Boston Logan airport, also bound for Los Angeles. Five
hijackers are aboard.
-
8:19
a.m.: Betty Ong, a flight attendant on Flight 11
alerts American Airlines of a hijacking in progress via an airphone.
-
8:20
a.m.: The Federal Aviation Administration's Boston
Center flight controllers decide that Flight 11 has probably been hijacked.
American Airlines Flight 77, a Boeing 757 with 58 passengers and six crew,
departs from Washington Dulles International Airport in Fairfax and Loudoun
Counties, Virginia, for Los Angeles. Five hijackers are aboard.
-
8:21
a.m. Flight 11's transponder signal is turned off
but the plane remains on radar screens.
-
8:24
a.m.
Flight 11 makes a 100-degree turn to the south
heading toward New York City. A radio transmission comes from Flight 11:
"We have some planes. Just stay quiet, and you'll be okay. We are
returning to the airport."
-
8:25
a.m.: Boston Center flight controllers alert other
flight control centers regarding Flight 11; however, NORAD is not yet alerted.
-
8:34
a.m.: Boston Center contacts Otis Air National Guard
Base at Cape Cod, through the FAA's Cape Cod facility, on the hijacking of
Flight 11.
-
8:37
a.m.: Flight 175 confirms sighting of hijacked
Flight 11 to flight controllers, 10 miles (16 km) to its south.
-
8:37:52
a.m.: Boston Center control notifies NEADS
(Northeast Air Defense Sector), the northeast sector of NORAD, of the
hijacking of Flight 11, the first notification received by the military, at
any level, that American 11 had been hijacked. The controller requests
military help to intercept the aircraft.
-
8:42
a.m.: United Airlines Flight 93, a Boeing 757, takes
off with 37 passengers and seven crew members from Newark International
Airport, bound for San Francisco International Airport, following a
40-minute delay due to congested runways. Four hijackers are aboard. Its
flight path initially takes it close to the World Trade Center before moving
away westwards.
-
8:42
a.m.: The FAA's New York Center requests information
about Flight 11 over the radio. Flight 175 responds: "Ah, we heard a
suspicious transmission on our departure out of Boston, ah, with someone,
ah, it sounded like someone keyed the mikes and said ah everyone stay in
your seats." New York Center acknowledges and says it will pass the
information on. Shortly after, Flight 175 is hijacked and also begins to
move southwards.
-
8:44
a.m.: Flight attendant Amy Sweeney, aboard Flight
11, reports by telephone to American Airlines Flight Services Office in
Boston, "Something is wrong. We are in a rapid descent . . . we are all
over the place." When asked to look out the window, she says, "We
are flying low. We are flying very, very low. We are flying way too
low." Seconds later she says, "Oh my God we are way too low,"
before the call ends.
-
8:46:26
a.m.
Flight 11 crashes at roughly 490 mph (790 km/h or 425 knots) into the north
side of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, between floors 94 and 98.
-
8:50
a.m.: NEADS is notified that a plane has struck the World
Trade Center as they continue to locate the flight on radar.
-
8:51
a.m.: A flight controller at the FAA's New York Center
notices that Flight 175 had changed its transponder code twice four minutes
earlier; he tries to contact the flight.
-
8:51 to 8:54
a.m.
(approx.): Hijacking begins on Flight 77.
-
8:53
a.m.: The F-15s at Otis Air Force Base are airborne. Still
lacking an intercept vector to Flight 11 (and not aware that it has already
been crashed), they are sent to military controlled airspace off Long Island
and ordered to remain in a holding pattern until between 9:09 and 9:13.
-
8:54
a.m.: Flight 77 deviates from its assigned course to Los
Angeles, turning south over Ohio. Two minutes later, its transponder is
turned off.
-
8:55
a.m. (approx.): Announcements are made by officials in the
still-undamaged South Tower of the World Trade Center that the building is
"secure", and that people may return to their offices, over the
building-wide PA system. Some do not hear it; others ignore it and evacuate
anyway; others congregate in common areas like the 78th floor sky lobby.
-
8:55
a.m.: President George W. Bush is at Emma E. Booker
Elementary School in Sarasota, Florida, as part of a scheduled visit to
promote education and the Bush administration education policies when
Presidential Advisor Karl Rove tells him that a small, twin-engine plane had
crashed into the World Trade Center. The president speaks to National
Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice at the White House; she reports that it
was a commercial aircraft.
-
9:01 to
9:02 a.m.: A manager from the FAA's New York Center
tells the Air Traffic Control System Command Center in Herndon, Virginia,
"We have several situations going on here. It's escalating big, big
time. We need to get the military involved with us. . . . We're, we're
involved with something else, we have other aircraft that may have a similar
situation going on here."
-
9:01
a.m.: FAA's New York Center contacts New York
terminal approach control and asks for help in locating Flight 175.
-
9:03:13
a.m.: Flight 175 crashes at
about 590 mph (950 km/h) into the south side of the South Tower, banked
between floors 78 and 84.
-
9:03
a.m.: President Bush enters a classroom as part of his
visit.
-
9:03
a.m.: FAA's New York Center notifies NORAD (NEADS) of the
hijacking of Flight 175.
-
9:04
a.m.
(approximately): The FAA's Boston Air Route Traffic
Control Center stops all departures from airports in its jurisdiction (New
England and eastern New York State).
-
9:06
a.m.: The FAA bans takeoffs of all flights bound to or
through the airspace of New York Center from airports in that Center and the
three adjacent Centers — Boston, Cleveland, and Washington. This is
referred to as a First Tier groundstop and covers the Northeast from North
Carolina north and as far west as eastern Michigan.
-
9:06
a.m.: After brief introductions to the Booker elementary
students, President Bush is about to begin reading with the students when
Chief of Staff Andrew Card interrupts to whisper to the president, "A
second plane hit the other tower, and America's under attack." The
president stated later that he decided to continue the lesson rather than
alarm the students.
-
9:08
a.m.
: The FAA bans all takeoffs nationwide for flights
going to or through New York Center airspace. ABC reports later that the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the agency that runs the New
York-area airports, asked the FAA for permission to close down the New York
Center airspace.
-
9:13
a.m.: The F-15 fighters from Otis Air Force base leave
military airspace near Long Island, bound for Manhattan.
-
9:15
a.m.
(approximately): President Bush leaves the classroom
in which he has been reading with students, and enters another, commandeered
by the Secret Service. It contains a telephone, a television showing the
news coverage, and several senior staff members. The president speaks to
Vice President Dick Cheney, Dr. Rice, New York Governor George Pataki, and
FBI Director Robert Mueller, and prepares brief remarks
-
9:17 a.m.: The Federal
Aviation Administration shuts down all New York City area airports.
-
9:21 a.m.: The Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey orders all bridges and tunnels in the
New York area closed.
-
9:23
a.m.: Flight 93 receives warning message text from United
Airlines flight dispatcher: "Beware any cockpit intrusion- Two a/c
[aircraft] hit World Trade Center."
-
9:24
a.m.: The FAA notifies NORAD's Northeast Air Defense Sector
about the suspected hijacking of Flight 77. The FAA and NORAD establish an
open line to discuss Flight 77, and shortly thereafter Flight 93.
-
9:25
a.m. : The Otis-based F-15s establish an air patrol over
Manhattan.
-
9:25
a.m.: A video teleconference begins to be set up in the
White House Situation Room, led by Richard A. Clarke, a special assistant to
the president, that eventually includes the CIA; the FBI; the departments of
State, Justice, and Defense; and the FAA.
-
9:28
a.m.: Hijackers storm the cockpit on Flight 93 and take
over the flight. The entry of the hijackers is overheard by flight
controllers at Cleveland.
-
9:29
a.m.: President Bush makes his first public statements
about the attacks, in front of an audience of about 200 teachers and
students at the elementary school. He states that he will be going back to
Washington, that "we've had a national tragedy", and leads a
moment of silence. After the speech, he is bound for Sarasota-Bradenton
International Airport and Air Force One.
-
9:33 to
9:34 a.m.: Tower supervisor at Reagan National Airport
tells Secret Service operations center at the White House that "an
aircraft [is] coming at you and not talking with us," referring to
Flight 77. The White House is about to be evacuated when the tower reports
that Flight 77 has turned and is approaching Reagan International Airport.
-
9:34
a.m.: The FAA's Command Center relays information
concerning Flight 93 to FAA headquarters.
-
9:35
a.m.: Flight 93 reverses direction over Ohio and starts
flying eastwards.
-
9:37a.m.: Based on a report that Flight 77 had turned again and
was circling back, Vice President Cheney is evacuated from the White House
to an underground tunnel leading to a security bunker.
-
9:37:46 a.m.: American
Airlines Flight 77 crashes into the Pentagon, sending up a huge plume of
smoke.The section of the Pentagon hit consists mainly of newly renovated,
unoccupied offices. All 64 persons on board are killed, as are 125 Pentagon
personnel.
-
9:43 a.m.: The White
House and the Capitol evacuate.
-
9:45
a.m.: United States
airspace is shut down. No civilian aircraft are allowed to take off, and all
aircraft in flight are ordered to land at the nearest airport as soon as
practical. All international flights headed for the U.S. are redirected to
Canada. Transport Canada, the Canadian transportation agency, follows the
American lead and closes down their airspace. The FAA announces that
civilian flights are suspended until at least noon September 12, while
Transport Canada gives similar orders, but until further notice, to take in
diverted U.S.-bound international flights, launching the agency's
"Operation Yellow Ribbon." The groundings last until September 14.
Military and medical flights continue.
-
9:49
a.m. The FAA Command
Center at Herndon suggests that someone at FAA headquarters should decide
whether to request military assistance with Flight 93. Ultimately, the FAA
makes no request before it crashes
-
9:57a.m.:
Passenger revolt
begins on Flight 93.
-
9:57 a.m.: Bush departs
from Florida.
-
10:03 a.m.: United
Airlines Flight 93, also hijacked, crashes in Somerset County, Pennsylvania,
southeast of Pittsburgh.
-
10:03
a.m. (approximately): The National Military Command Center
learns from the White House of Flight 93's hijacking.
-
10:05 a.m.: The south
tower of the World Trade Center collapses, plummeting into the streets
below. A massive cloud of dust and debris forms and slowly drifts away from
the building.
-
10:08 a.m.: Secret
Service agents armed with automatic rifles are deployed into Lafayette Park
across from the White House.
-
10:05
a.m.: NEADS, controlling the only set of fighters over
Washington, first learns of the hijacking of Flight 93.
-
10:08
a.m.: Air Traffic Control System Command Center in Herndon
reports to FAA headquarters that Flight 93 may be down near Johnstown,
Pennsylvania
-
10:10 a.m.: A portion
of the Pentagon collapses.
-
10:10
a.m.: NEADS emphatically tells fighter pilots over
Washington, "negative clearance to shoot."
-
10:10 to 10:15
a.m. (approximately): Vice President Cheney,
unaware that Flight 93 has crashed, authorizes fighter aircraft to engage
the inbound plane, reported to be 80 miles (129 km) from Washington, based
not on radar (from which it has disappeared) but speed and trajectory
projections.
-
10:13 a.m.: The United
Nations building evacuates, including 4,700 people from the headquarters
building and 7,000 total from UNICEF and U.N. development programs.
-
10:14 to
10:19 a.m.: A lieutenant colonel at the White House
repeatedly relays to the NMCC that the Vice President has confirmed that
fighters are cleared to engage inbound aircraft if they can verify that the
aircraft was hijacked.
-
10:22 a.m.: In
Washington, the State and Justice departments are evacuated, along with the
World Bank.
-
10:24 a.m.: The FAA
reports that all inbound transatlantic aircraft flying into the United
States are being diverted to Canada.
-
10:28 a.m.: The World
Trade Center's north tower collapses from the top down as if it were being
peeled apart, releasing a tremendous cloud of debris and smoke.
-
10:31a.m.: NORAD first communicates the Vice President's
shootdown authority to its NEADS sector.
-
10:35a.m.: Air Force One, carrying the president, turns for
Barksdale Air Force Base in Shreveport, Louisiana.
-
10:45 a.m.: All federal
office buildings in Washington are evacuated.
-
10.46 a.m.: U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell cuts short his trip to Latin America to
return to the United States.
-
10.48 a.m.: Police
confirm the plane crash in Pennsylvania.
-
10:53 a.m.: New York's
primary elections, scheduled for Tuesday, are postponed.
-
10:54 a.m.: Israel
evacuates all diplomatic missions.
-
10:57 a.m.: New York
Gov. George Pataki says all state government offices are closed.
-
11:00
a.m.: Transport Canada halts all aircraft departures until
further notice, except for police, military, and humanitarian flights,
-
11:02 a.m.: New York
City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani urges New Yorkers to stay at home and orders an
evacuation of the area south of Canal Street.
-
11:18 a.m.: American
Airlines reports it has lost two aircraft. American Flight 11, a Boeing 767
flying from Boston to Los Angeles, had 81 passengers and 11 crew aboard.
Flight 77, a Boeing 757 en route from Washington's Dulles International
Airport to Los Angeles, had 58 passengers and six crew members aboard.
Flight 11 slammed into the north tower of the World Trade Center. Flight 77
hit the Pentagon.
-
11:26 a.m.: United
Airlines reports that United Flight 93, en route from Newark, New Jersey, to
San Francisco, California, has crashed in Pennsylvania. The airline also
says that it is "deeply concerned" about United Flight 175.
-
11:59 a.m.: United
Airlines confirms that Flight 175, from Boston to Los Angeles, has crashed
with 56 passengers and nine crew members aboard. It hit the World Trade
Center's south tower.
-
12:04 p.m.: Los Angeles
International Airport, the destination of three of the crashed airplanes, is
evacuated.
-
12:15
p.m: San
Francisco International Airport is evacuated and shut down. The airport was
the destination of United Airlines Flight 93, which crashed in Pennsylvania.
-
12:15 p.m.: The
Immigration and Naturalization Service says U.S. borders with Canada and
Mexico are on the highest state of alert, but no decision has been made
about closing borders.
-
12:30 p.m.: The FAA
says 50 flights are in U.S. airspace, but none are reporting any problems.
-
1:00
p.m.
(approximately): At the Pentagon, fire crews are still
fighting fires. The early response to the attack had been coordinated from
the National Military Command Center, but that had to be evacuated when it
began to fill with smoke.
-
1:04
p.m.: President Bush puts the U.S. military on high alert
worldwide (known as Threat Condition Delta). Taped remarks from the
President were aired from Barksdale Air Force Base, stating that
"freedom itself was attacked this morning by a faceless coward and
freedom will be defended." He also said that the "United States
will hunt down and punish those responsible for these cowardly acts."
He then leaves for a US Strategic Command bunker located at Offutt Air Force
Base in Bellevue, Nebraska.
-
1:27 p.m.: A state of
emergency is declared by the city of Washington.
-
1:44 p.m.: The Pentagon
says five warships and two aircraft carriers will leave the U.S. Naval
Station in Norfolk, Virginia, to protect the East Coast from further attack
and to reduce the number of ships in port. The two carriers, the USS George
Washington and the USS John F. Kennedy, are headed for the New York coast.
The other ships headed to sea are frigates and guided missile destroyers
capable of shooting down aircraft.
-
1:48 p.m.: Bush leaves
Barksdale Air Force Base aboard Air Force One and flies to an Air Force base
in Nebraska.
-
2:30 p.m.: The FAA
announces there will be no U.S. commercial air traffic until noon EDT
Wednesday at the earliest.
-
2:39 p.m.: At a news
conference, Giuliani says that subway and bus service are partially restored
in New York City. Asked about the number of people killed, Giuliani says,
"I don't think we want to speculate about that -- more than any of us
can bear."
-
2:50
p.m.: President Bush arrives at Offutt Air Force
Base, Nebraska to convene a National Security Council teleconference via the
US Statcom bunker.
-
3:55 p.m.: Karen
Hughes, a White House counselor, says the president is at an undisclosed
location, later revealed to be Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska, and is
conducting a National Security Council meeting by phone. Vice President Dick
Cheney and National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice are in a secure
facility at the White House. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is at the
Pentagon.
-
3:55 p.m.: Giuliani now
says the number of critically injured in New York City is up to 200 with
2,100 total injuries reported.
-
4:10 p.m.: Building 7
of the World Trade Center complex is reported on fire
-
4:25 p.m.: The American
Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange say they will
remain closed Wednesday.
-
4:30 p.m.: The
president leaves Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska aboard Air Force One to
return to Washington.
-
5:20 p.m.: The 47-story
Building 7 of the World Trade Center complex collapses. The evacuated
building is damaged when the twin towers across the street collapse earlier
in the day. Other nearby buildings in the area remain ablaze.
-
6:10 p.m.:Giuliani
urges New Yorkers to stay home Wednesday if they can.
-
6:40 p.m.: Donald
Rumsfeld, the U.S. defense secretary, holds a news conference in the
Pentagon, noting the building is operational. "It will be in business
tomorrow," he says.
-
6:54 p.m.: Bush arrives
back at the White House aboard Marine One and is scheduled to address the
nation at 8:30 p.m. The president earlier landed at Andrews Air Force Base
in Maryland with a three-fighter jet escort.
-
7:00
p.m.: Efforts to locate survivors in the rubble that had
been the twin towers continue. Fleets of ambulances are lined up to
transport the injured to nearby hospitals, but stand empty. 'Ground Zero' is
the exclusive domain of New York City's Fire Department and Police
Department, despite volunteer steel and construction workers who stand ready
to move large quantities of debris quickly. Relatives and friends of victims
or likely victims, many displaying enlarged photographs of the missing
printed on home computer printers, have appeared around New York.
-
7:17 p.m.: U.S.
Attorney General John Ashcroft says the FBI is setting up a Web site for
tips on the attacks: www.ifccfbi.gov. He also says family and friends of
possible victims can leave contact information at 800-331-0075.
-
7:45 p.m.: The New York
Police Department says that at least 78 officers are missing. The city also
says that as many as half of the first 400 firefighters on the scene were
killed.
-
8:30 p.m.: President
Bush addresses the nation, saying "thousands of lives were suddenly
ended by evil" and asks for prayers for the families and friends of
Tuesday's victims. "These acts shattered steel, but they cannot dent
the steel of American resolve," he says. The president says the U.S.
government will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed the
acts and those who harbor them. He adds that government offices in
Washington are reopening for essential personnel Tuesday night and for all
workers Wednesday.
-
9:00
p.m.: President Bush meets his full National Security
Council, followed roughly half an hour later by a meeting with a smaller
group of key advisers. Bush and his advisers have evidence that Osama bin
Laden is behind the attacks. CIA Director Tenet says that al-Qaeda and the
Taliban in Afghanistan are essentially one and the same. Bush says,
"Tell the Taliban we're finished with them."
-
9:57 p.m.: Giuliani
says New York City schools will be closed Wednesday and no more volunteers
are needed for Tuesday evening's rescue efforts. He says there is hope that
there are still people alive in rubble. He also says that power is out on
the westside of Manhattan and that health department tests show there are no
airborne chemical agents about which to worry.