Chief Richard “Pitch”
Picciotto, the highest-ranking firefighter to survive the terrorist attack on
the World Trade Center and the collapse of the Twin Towers, will be the featured
speaker Sunday, Sept. 1, in the John Paul Hammerschmidt Lecture Series at North
Arkansas College. His lecture, which is open to the public free of charge, will
start at 4 p.m. in the Conference Center of the John Paul Hammerschmidt Business
and Conference Center on Northark’s South Campus.
Picciotto was on a stairwell between the sixth and seventh
floors of the North Tower when it collapsed on September 11, 2001. A FDNY
battalion commander, his is the harrowing true story of an American hero.
Picciotto tells an outspoken account of that indelible day, shaking and
inspiring audiences to the core.
On the morning of September 11, Picciotto answered the call
heard around the world. In minutes he was at Ground Zero of the worst terrorist
attack on American soil, acting boldly to save innocent lives as the Twin Towers
of the World Trade Center began to burn—and then to buckle. Already a veteran of
terrorist attacks, Picciotto fought a similar battle at the World Trade Center
Bombing in 1993.
Eight years later, he found himself again inside the North
Tower. Burdened by an eerie sense of familiarity, he focused his concentration
on the rescue efforts at hand. But it was there in the smoky stairwells where he
heard and felt the South Tower collapse; where he made the call for firemen and
rescue workers to evacuate, while he stayed behind with a skeleton team of men
to assist a group of disabled and infirm civilians in their struggle to evacuate
the inferno. And it was there in the rubble of the North Tower where Picciotto
found himself buried—for more than four hours after the building's collapse.
Having discovered that members of his team and a 59-year-old
grandmother also were alive nearby, he and his men used their radios to send out
Mayday calls until making contact with a firefighter on the ground and a search
party was dispatched. When the light finally appeared about four stories above,
he climbed upwards, reached the top and saw the "unfathomable, mind-boggling
destruction." And even then, it was not until after he organized the rescue of
the others that he walked across the rubble to safety.
Picciotto's book, Last Man Down, is a tribute to the 343
firefighters and some 3,000 civilians that lay dead in the rubble that
surrounded him on that day. Moreover, it is a heartfelt remembrance of a day of
infamy and profound humanity. The book was an immediate New York Times Best
Seller upon its May, 2002 release.
Chief Picciotto is also a former New York City police
officer, and has served as a fire marshal, an arson investigator, a lieutenant
and a captain, prior to becoming chief in 1992. He is a twenty-eight year
veteran of the FDNY, and for the past nine years he has presided over the
department's Battalion 11, covering Manhattan's Upper West Side. He is the
recipient of departmental awards and commendations for his bravery and
meritorious service.
Picciotto’s talk will be the seventh JPH Lecture. He follows
astronaut Dr. Jerry Linenger, Sherpa mountain guide Jamling Tenzing Norgay, CIA
officers Tony and Jonna Mendez, syndicated columnist Gwynne Dyer, former North
Vietnam prisoner of war Colonel Edward L. Hubbard, and 1972 Olympic
800-meter-run champion Dave Wottle as a speaker in the series.
Funded by private gifts to the North Arkansas College
Foundation, the JPH Lecture Series sponsors national experts to speak about
topics of interest to the people of northern Arkansas. Congressman Hammerschmidt
has an office at Northark, and many of his photographs, awards, and other
memorabilia area on display in the building that bears his name.
Last Updated: 19 October, 2006