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Showing posts from August, 2008

The Chairs

Another photo I took on one of my many visits to the site. The chairs represent where the casualties were found.

The Job

Rescue worker’s prepare to enter the building.

The Slab

This is a photo of the slab or section of the building that pan caked.

Those who died

Must we never forget those who lost their life in this tragedy! A list of those we lost. May God be with them. Aleman Jr., Lucio, 33 Alexander, Teresa, 33 Allen, Richard Arthur, 46, Yukon Allen, Ted Leon, 48, Norman Almon, Baylee, 1, Midwest City Althouse, Diane E. (Hollingsworth), 45, Edmond Anderson, Rebecca, 37 Argo, Pamela Cleveland, 36, Oklahoma City Avery, Saundra "Sandy", 34, Midwest City Avillanoza, Peter, 56 Battle, Calvin, 62 Battle, Peola, 51 Bell, Danielle Nicole, 15 months Biddy, Oleta Christine, 54, Oklahoma City Bland, Shelly Turner, 25 Blanton, Andrea Y., 33, Oklahoma City Bloomer, Olen Burl, 61 Bolden, Army Sgt. 1st Class Lola Renee, 40, Birmingham, AL Boles, James E., 51 Bolte, Mark A., 27 Booker, Cassandra Kay, 25, Oklahoma City Bowers, Carol Louise, 53, Yukon Bradley, Peachlyn, 3, Oklahoma City Brady, Woodrow "Woody" Clifford Brady, 41, Oklahoma City Brown, Cynthia Lynn (Campbell), 26 Broxterman, Paul G., 43 Bruce, Gabreon DeShawn Lee, 4 months B

9:03

This is a photo I took some years later on a visit to the site. If you ever go to the memorial you’ll see two gold walls on each end of the memorial one with 9:01 and the other with 9:03 writing at the top of each wall, What this represents is between the walls is 9:02 which was when the bomb went off. So, in the middle is where time stopped hence 9:02.

Okc Fire

Oklahoma City Fire Department’s ladder truck moving into position, this photo is from the West looking East.

The Track

Obviously heavy equipment was needed for the removal of debris! This is a track hoe with a grappler and what it does is grab large chunks of cement, rebar, rocks etc. it has the ability to move 360 degrees in full circle. In other words it can pick up an object that is in front of it, circle around and drop it directly behind itself.

Inside looking out

This photo is from inside the Murrah! It pretty much tells the story itself.

A Somber Day

The top photo is basically rescue in progress! Your looking East. The second photo is the Water Resource Building which cradled the Athenian Restaurant just on the other side of it, In the foreground is the YMCA all three of these buildings are gone. Third photo is basically the same photo as two but just turned a little towards the East.

Temp Morgue

This building was used as a temporary morgue as grim as it sounds the refrigerator trailers you see is what housed those who lost their life. Fortunately the building is a church.

First Aid Tents

First Aid tents where set up on the corner of Broad Way and 5th street.

10 Years Past

A photo I took while at the site 10 years later.

Looking East

You are now looking from the West end of 5th street.

YMCA from Broadway

This photo was taken by me from the East end of 5th street.

Subpoena

Part of a four page subpoena I received during the Terry Nichols Trial 2004.

Kathy Sanders, Me and Janie Coverdale

This photo was taken at the 10yr anniversary I was with Janie Coverdale and Kathy Sanders both lost their grand kids Chase & Colton Smith, Aaron & Elijah Coverdale.

A rare visit

Again this was a photo I took before I went in to my apartment.

Walking into the Regency

This photo was taken by me on a rare day I was able to go back to my apartment.

The rear of the building

This was taken from the rear of the building from the best I can tell that’s me circled.

The Regency

During the time the residents of the Regency where displaced every so often the would allow you to come down and retrieve some of your belongings out of your apartment and this was a very rare occasion. However the first time I went I snapped this photo. They had armed guards and a red cross volunteer take you from the ground floor to your apartment. On this particular trip I was unable to get anything because someone had gone through my belongings and took what they needed.

Inside the Murrah

This photo was taken at night looking into the Murrah.

Nightmare

This image is one I live with, this is what I saw coming up to the blast site. can't say where I was when this was taken?

Night time Opps

This is where I found myself, in the rear of the Murrah Building what this scene is, is volunteers me being one of them would line up on a stair case, as the fire fighters pulled the remains from the building they would motion for people to come up and carry them off the site. I left this site around 9 pm only to figure out I had no place to go! So, I walked some 12 blocks away to the church where I remained for the next 14 weeks.

10 years Later

10 years later Me with friend Janie Coverdale at the site.

Fort Worth Star

While I was at the 10 year anniversary of the Bombing. I was with Janie Coverdale my neighbor, she lost two grandsons Elijah and Aaron and let me tell you those boys where a hand full I would play with them in the hall and they had this crazy knack to knock on my door and run to grandma, where she in turn would promptly tell them to leave me alone. Any how during this visit I was ask by a reporter if I would do an interview about my account prior to the blast that took so many. To make along story short I was subpoenaed to the Terry Nichols trail about this account however I did not testify for reason to long for me to explain here, After the trail Terry came out in a jail house confession my story happen to come out the same day his did. This is the article that ran that morning.

Move in Day Dallas Morning News

This was part of the News Article from the Dallas morning News on October 3rd 1995.

Night out with the News

One thing you need to understand is that being that close to such an event will attract people to you, the Lady on the far left is Liz Massey she was the Red Cross volunteer that worked in the Church I was staying in Liz later on went to MSU and became a reporter for the school she did write a couple of stories with me. The other two are reporters from Boston. They treated us to a night out at a local pub.

The Police

Photo taken hours after the blasts.

From the Murrah

This view is from the Murrah Building somewhere around the 5th or 6th floor.

The Closing of day

Every time I travel to Oklahoma City I visit the site for personal reasons and promises I have made. One after noon late in the day I went to the site for my promises and wishes and as I walked into the memorial this was the scene, a very peaceful one.

From the 23th floor

This photo was taken when I finally was able to move back in to the Regency Apartments, what was so strange about the move in was they had started with the top floors 24 going down. I had opted to take an apartment on the 23 floor! So, they would move you days apart from the rest of the floors. For example 24, 23, 22 could move in on this week and then a few weeks later they would allow 21, 20 and so on depending on the damage to the floor, some floors went unoccupied for months, then there was the residents that would never return. So, move in day was a media event to say the least, I myself was photographed and interviewed by the Dallas Morning News, they went as far as coming up into my apartment and photographed it as well. The first few weeks living there immediately took a toll on the mental state of mind, the building itself would make noises, I felt like it was moaning from what had taken place just a few hundred feet from where it stood, at night time it would whistle, this co

Darkness

This was the view from the Regency Apartments ground level looking East on 5th street.

The Scene as it unfolded.

This photo was taken moments after the blast, it was taken from the side walk in front of the Regency Towers my apartment complex.

The shell of the Murrah

This photo was taken just weeks before the imploded the remains of the building.

Post Office Photo

This photo was taken looking South in front of the Post Office, The guy with no shirt was a neighbor of mine who at the time lived a couple of floors above me. The blast threw him out of bed, covered in glass with cuts all over himself he managed to get down to the lobby and out the front door.

What did the 18th floor look like?

This is a photo of my studio apartment which was on the 18th floor of the Regency across the street from the Murrah Building. My apartment faced the North side. You’re looking at North Oklahoma City from that window.

As we prepare

This was another photo that was taken from the East side looking West on 5th street, That’s me standing behind the Soldier I was with one of the nurses we were about to walk up into the Murrah Building as civilian rescue workers. I went back into this photo and circled myself.

Me and Philly

This is me and my dear friend Philly me and her spent a long 14 days sleeping on cots in a church a few blocks away, She was awaiting word on her lost sister. Diane E. Althouse, 45, was four days away from vowing her devotion as an associate of a Catholic abbey, the Rev. Charles Buckley said. Buckley, director of oblates at St. Gregory's Abbey in Shawnee said Althouse's oblation was scheduled April 23, a ceremony of devotion as a Benedictine Oblate Novice. "She was very much given to her religion," Buckley said. Althouse, a member of St. John the Baptist Catholic Church of Edmond, worked at the Housing and Urban Development Department in downtown Oklahoma City. The photo was taken at the bomb site 10 years later.

A Scene from the Regency

This was the scene from the Regency a few hours after the blast, I didn’t take this photo.

Oklahoma City Bombing My Story

I’m going to start a series of photo’s for you showing the Oklahoma City bombing these are pictures that have been giving to me over the past few years! The first picture is the Apartment building I lived in The Regency Tower which is located at 333 NW 5th , North West of the Murrah Building. At the time of the bombing I lived on the 18th floor apartment 1813 ironically the same address of the house I lived in during my high school years.