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WTC Album - Bill Biggart was killed taking these photos

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World Trade Center Movie (911 '01 WTC)
Soundtrack: famous broadcast Gordon Sinclair
"The Americans" June 5, 1973

Proudly produced on the 2nd anniversary of this tragic event
commemorating those who died


Click here to see WTC Movie

 

150+ photos
Many photos I have not shown you here before

File: wtc-movie3a-fs.mov 
File size: 2,208 kb
Run time: 5 min 8 sec
Download time: 10 min (dialup)

Soundtrack: famous broadcast by
Gordon Sinclair "The Americans" June 5, 1973

 


Photo of Bill Biggart


Movie Bill Biggart's last photos New  9-24-2003

Bill Biggart Photo Slideshow  -  Bill Biggart Articles  -  More WTC Attack Photos

 

Source: http://digitaljournalist.org/issue0111/biggart01.htm


Bill Biggart Newsweek  Album
Newsweek Slideshow  -  Newsweek Article

Bill Biggart was a photographer who died taking pictures of the Trade Center.
When his body was recovered, so were his last frames. Here is what he saw

Source: http://www.msnbc.com/news/639271.asp?cp1=1#BODY


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"Bill Biggart's Final Exposures"

By Dirck Halstead
Top

Photographer Chip East was staring intensely at his laptop screen.

It was two weeks after two jetliners had plowed into the towers of the World Trade Center. His good friend, photojournalist Bill Biggart's body had been recovered from the rubble. His personal effects, including his cameras had been released by authorities to his widow, Wendy.

Biggart. a photographer, who had worked for an alternative New York picture agency, had been carrying three cameras with him, when he left his home in Manhattan that sparkling Tuesday morning, and started walking south towards the plumes of smoke. There were two Canon EOS1s film cameras. He was also carrying his Canon D30 digital camera. For Biggart, mastering the new techniques of digital photography had been a break-through.

When Chip East was handed the bag containing Biggart's gear by his widow, Wendy, he was convinced that no pictures had survived. The avalanche of falling debris had blown off the backs of the two film cameras. There were several rolls of film in Biggart's bag; however, the lids of the film canisters had been peeled back, allowing light to fall into the cassettes. Finally, East turned his attention to the digital camera. It was covered by ash. The lens had been sheared off at the flange. But when he opened the chamber that held the compact flash card, it was pristine.

He slipped the flash card into his computer reader, and tried to open it. At first, it refused to open, East kept mumbling, "come onScome on!" He rebooted his computer, and suddenly three folders opened on his desktop. They contained all the last images that Bill Biggart would ever take.

Now, looking at the photographs, it is possible to retrace Biggart's last hour of life, as he works his way ever closer to Ground Zero.

Here, Chip East takes over the story:

"As you scroll through 150 pictures or so, you are not only just looking at a guy on the street making deliberate pictures, but they are framed a certain way, tells us something about the photographer as well. In this first frame we see trees, and the buildings in Manhattan framing the burning World Trade Center. I think a lot of people would have photographed that tight, and looked at just the main story. But to see it framed by a part of New York as he was walking through Greenwitch Village is somewhat symbolic of Bill Biggart and how he made pictures. Also, the fact that he was from New York, and with trees in the pictures, I don't know, maybe it is inferring too much, but it means a lot to see foliage, and to see one of his other passions (trees) in the first pictures.

"As I looked at them for the first time, it wasn't just the pictures, but I was looking around and listening to those of us who were at Bill’s studio. Hearing Bill's wife, Wendy, saying things like, ‘Oh Damn, Bill, why are you so close;?’ really meant something too. Here we were two weeks after he was killed, and she was still talking to him, through his pictures.

"As you get there, the unique angle of looking straight up at the buildings, you never saw that from anybody else. As you go through the timestamps, the cloud of dust comes towards you. You just see this massive cloud framed with fire trucks and police cars, and firemen and policemen.

"So we are looking at the cloud coming towards Bill and the 30 seconds worth of pictures that Newsweek did from 9:59:10 to 10:00:08, which is basically when the first cloud covered him. In the pictures, he frames up when the cloud is right on him, and you still have the North tower, framed right in there.

"He is going closer and closer, as you go through, you see peoples reaction, and you see how people are handling all this... every one of Bill's pictures are about people and how they are reacting to this story. We need to remind ourselves this story isn't about buildings, but about how people are effected by the loss of these structures.

"So we track through to the end, and we see the second to the last frame. He is moving forward, he is walking down West street, and he is moving towards the pedestrian overpass connecting the World Trade Center and the World Financial Center. Bill is getting closer and closer, and you see more firemen and fire trucks and the second to the last frame you see policemen, and fire trucks under the overpass.

"And then you see the last frame that nobody else will ever have. You see the honeycomb pieces of the first building... and we see half of the hotel that was destroyed as well. After the second building fell, the hotel, the Marriott I think, was gone. You see it cut in half from what fell from the first building and it is time stamped 10:28 and 24 seconds. Basically that time stamp is the end, because at 10:30 is when the second building came down.

"Bill was killed when the second building came down, and he was crushed under all the debris. I don't know if he jumped back under the underpass, or whether the direct debris killed him. We know in his last picture he was working to the very end, and that's telling of the commitment he had to his work."

Source: http://digitaljournalist.org/issue0111/biggart_intro.htm

 

Shooting To the End  Top

Bill Biggart was a photographer who died taking pictures of the Trade Center. When his body was recovered, so were his last frames. Here is what he saw

By Jerry Adler
NEWSWEEK

Oct. 15 issue — Bill Biggart walked two miles from his apartment near Union Square to reach Ground Zero on the morning of the attack, taking pictures along the way, and he went about 100 feet too far. Other photographers were almost as close to the Twin Towers that morning, but Biggart—who disdained the telephoto lens as a device best suited to taking pictures of Jennifer Lopez sunbathing—felt the need to get closer than any of them. As a photojournalist Biggart was drawn to conflict, but the best pictures he brought back were of faces—grinning Israeli soldiers and exuberant Palestinian youths, shot from so close that his wife, Wendy Doremus, didn’t dare ask for details of his trips until he was safely back in New York. And from the site of the most recent horror, which struck almost within sight of his windows, he would have brought back faces, too, if he had returned himself. Instead, the 300-odd photographs he took that morning with his three cameras—two film, one digital—were buried along with him in the rubble of the second tower’s collapse, and dug out four days later, along with his body. He was the only professional photographer who died covering the disaster.

THIS TIME, DOREMUS knew where he was, because he’d said goodbye and headed out the door soon after the first plane hit. Judging from what he shot along the way, he must have walked down Fifth Avenue, through Greenwich Village and then to West Street, along the river, where the fire trucks were. Most of the other photographers appear to have come down Broadway and approached the Twin Towers from the east. A few minutes after he left, Doremus, with a mixture of curiosity and anxiety, grabbed her Instamatic and headed downtown herself through a sea of pedestrians streaming in the other direction. She was within a few blocks of Ground Zero when the first tower collapsed. She called him on his cell phone.

“Bill,” she said, “this is an attack. One of the towers collapsed and the Pentagon’s been hit.” He told her he would meet her in 20 minutes at his studio, a safe distance away. “I’m OK,” he reassured her. “I’m with the firemen.”

Of course, everyone knows what happened to the firemen. Doremus was heading back uptown toward the studio when she heard a boom; she turned around just in time to make a snapshot of the second tower as its million tons of concrete and steel collapsed above her husband’s head. No one who knew Biggart was surprised that he stayed to make a few more shots. “My dad was always saying he’d be home in 20 minutes,” says his oldest child, Bill Jr., 31. Still, in the weeks since, the family couldn’t help thinking about how things would have been different if Biggart had kept his word and left when he’d promised to. It’s an easy question, says Bill Jr. “For the rest of his life, he would have been bitching about how we made him miss the photo of the second tower falling.”

Biggart had attitude, but it served him well enough in life. “We got all these cards,” says Bill Jr.’s wife, Veronica, “and the ones that talked about what a sweet, lovable guy he was were all from people who didn’t know him very well.” He was a cocksure, streetwise Irish-Catholic kid in a family of 12 kids, at ease among cops and firemen and soldiers and the boyos of the Belfast slums. His strength was in loyalty to his family and his convictions. He’d raised Billy himself from infancy after his first wife, a model, went out for a pack of cigarettes and forgot to come home—even though for years, until he met Doremus, it locked him into the predictable routine of commercial studio work, taking pictures of pouting women in fur coats while, in the world outside, men heroically fought and died. It would be 1985 before he earned a working-press card, allowing him to follow in the footsteps of his hero, Mathew Brady, whose press card was signed by Abraham Lincoln. War held for him the allure of the horrible; Biggart was the despair of his father, a conservative Army officer and businessman who had come to the agonizing conclusion that his peace-loving son was a commie. His passion was for gardening; he planted trees on the grubby street outside his studio for the edification of the transvestite hookers who inhabited this gentrification-proof neighborhood.

For almost his whole life, Biggart had been afraid of fire, ever since his house burned down when he was 3, killing a younger brother and sister. But he was drawn to fires, too, to burning tanks in the Middle East, bonfires in Northern Ireland, kitchen fires in the tenements of New York City. For more than a decade he was a mainstay of Impact Visuals, an independent agency that (until it folded earlier this year) provided photos to New York’s alternative weekly papers. Many people died painfully in the flames of the burning towers that morning, but on the street, where Biggart was, death came with a swift and mercifully obliterating blow to the head. After waiting for him a few hours at the studio, unable to raise him on his cell phone, Doremus had returned home to be with their 16-year-old daughter, Kate, who was preparing to leave for a year-abroad program in Spain. Their son, Peter, 14, was in his first day of eighth grade and returned later that day. The next morning, Bill’s friend Chip East arose early and went down to the west bank of the Hudson River to take a picture of the sun rising over the new skyline of lower Manhattan. Then he headed for a trauma center where the families of the missing were gathering, and he heard someone call his name. It was Doremus.

“Have you heard from Bill?” she asked breathlessly. Like every photojournalist, East has been to disasters of every kind and scale, from motorcycle accidents to plane crashes, but he had never been touched by one directly before.

“My God,” he thought, “how will I take a picture now?” Then a woman saw his camera and came toward him, holding a photograph of her missing son. She was crying. Reflexively, he brought his camera up and began snapping pictures through his own tears.
In his own way—a way any journalist can understand—Biggart was a hero as well. He rescued faces.

Like thousands of others, Doremus made the grim rounds of trauma centers and hospitals for the next four days, until with mingled dread and relief she got the call on Saturday to come to the medical examiner’s office. Biggart’s death, she thinks, has been hardest on Peter, who shared with his father a passion for the Yankees. The team is in the playoffs again this year, and for the first time Bill won’t be there to listen to the games with his son. Kate and Doremus have made a small game out of imagining where Bill really has been the last three weeks. On an aircraft carrier. No, in Pakistan. Maybe Afghanistan, even—the only American photographer to get a picture of Osama bin Laden. No wonder he hasn’t called.

After four days, Biggart’s body was pulled from the rubble, and identified by his fingerprints. The medical examiner told Doremus it was not suitable for viewing. But his clothes were all recovered, and all his belongings, down to the $26 in his wallet; the only sign that he’d been at the scene of one of the world’s great conflagrations was a burned edge on his press card. As for his equipment, the three camera bodies were mostly intact, although the lenses had been smashed or sheared off, and the backs had blown off the two film cameras, destroying whatever images might have been in them at the end. But seven rolls of exposed film had been recovered, and the microdisk was still in the back of his digital camera.

Doremus left it all untouched until East returned from his own postdisaster assignment, shooting American soldiers preparing for battle at Fort Bragg. Not knowing what to expect, East popped the disk from Biggart’s camera into his computer and on the second try got an image, then more—154 in all, perfectly preserved, in sequence from the moment he glimpsed the towers in the distance until... well, the last of them was time-stamped 9:28 a.m., but Biggart had evidently neglected to correct the camera’s clock for daylight saving time, so it was actually an hour later, more or less the precise time of the second collapse. Looking at the hellish landscape, the stump of the South Tower barely emerging from its shroud of smoke and dust, East realized he was seeing what his friend had seen in his last moments on earth.

As always, Biggart had concentrated on faces; his gift was for street portraiture, even at disasters. In the tens of thousands of photographs he left behind in his studio there are no moody landscapes, cute babies or scowling celebrities pretending to hate having their picture taken. (Almost none: he once came upon New York’s accidental vigilante Bernhard Goetz reading a newspaper in the subway and started clicking away; when a bystander urged him to leave he growled back, “When you shoot four kids on the subway you give up your right to privacy.”) Biggart would go into battle with a 35mm lens, ideal for close-ups, while everyone around him was shooting with telephotos. “One thing he always taught me,” says Tom McKitterick, a colleague from Impact Visuals, “was that sometimes the picture is behind you, in the faces of the people watching.” As disaster unfolded all around him, Biggart pointed his camera at a lone fireman, his yellow stripes bright against a background of opaque ash, kicking up dust as he trudged closer; he saw a man in what was left of a business suit, holding his necktie in one hand, his shirt unaccountably unbuttoned, filthy on one side but clean where it had lain against his skin; another man covered in gray soot except for two circles around his eyes—he looks down at the ground as if searching for his vanished eyeglasses.

And what can you learn from these pictures? About Biggart, that up until the end he was doing his job: “He was on his game, he was following the picture, he was framing his shots,” says East. About the unfolding catastrophe itself, that in the last minutes there was no panic, no chaos, no fear of imminent death. “The faces of the firemen were serene—exhausted, but serene and focused,” says McKitterick. A great deal of honor has been heaped, deservedly, on the heroes who rushed to the World Trade Center that morning to rescue lives. In his own way—a way any journalist can understand—Biggart was a hero as well. He rescued faces.


Wendy Doremus, widow of photojournalist Bill Biggart, holds up what's left of the camera that was discovered next to Biggart's body in the rubble of the World Trade Center

Source: http://www.msnbc.com/news/639271.asp?cp1=1#BODY


Click here to see more WTC people photos

 

 

See also:

The Americans Transcript of 1973 famous broadcast by Gordon Sinclair
TERRORIST MANUAL Part 1 of 2

TERRORIST MANUAL Part 2 of 2
TERRORIST MANUAL 
(180 pages - one file new 9/10/02
Attack photos

Towers Withstood Impact, but Fell to Fire, Report Says. Towers Withstood Impact, but Fell to Fire, Report Says. The incredible energy generated by this blaze was estimated to be three to five gigawatts at its peak. A typical nuclear power plant generates about one gigawatt. All of that energy was converted to deadly heat that began weakening the steel. 3/29/02
Pentagon Attack Slideshow New Photos Show Attack on Pentagon. A series of five photos obtained today show the first available images of the Pentagon as a plane hijacked by terrorists slammed into the building the morning of Sept. 11. www.washingtonpost.com  March 7, 2002
Why are Muslims so upset with the U.S.? The Core of Muslim Rage Because the real answer is rooted in something very deep. It has to do with the contrast between Islam's self-perception as the most ideal and complete expression of the three great monotheistic religions — Judaism, Christianity and Islam — and the conditions of poverty, repression and underdevelopment in which most Muslims live today. 3/6/02

Are We What We're Not?  Good NYTimes article about us after 9/11, 1/6/02
What Would Jesus Do About Bin Laden? Not to mention, Buddha, Moses and Machiavelli, Newsweek 12/22/01
Firefighters Raising Flag at WTC Photo and Article by Ricky Flores 12/10/01
Why more bin Ladens and Talibans will come NY Times 12/2/01
WHAT IS JIHAD - JIHAD EXPLAINED The Institute of Islamic Information and Education 10/30/01
We Are All Alone - Except For the British NY Times 10/26/01
Why tribal rules won't let Afghanistan turn over bin Laden NY Times 10/21/01
A letter to Osama bin Laden Orlando Sentinel 10/18/01
CDC - Anthrax 10/15/01 (good)
Our paradise of trivia, celebrity, consumption and cosmetic-surgery is now our home of paranoia of potential mortal threats -- Season of the Witch NY Times 10/14/01
War on Terrorism London Sunday Times 10/14/01 (best incisive review I've found)
What Is Anthrax and How Can You Get Infected? (2) good articles 10/13/01
Bin Laden Wants U. S. To Strike Back Disproportionately NY Times 10/13/01
FBI Most Wanted Terrorist List 10/11/01
New York Times Front Page 10/8/01
This Is a Religious War NY Times 10/7/01
Text of Evidence Against bin Laden released by British government 10/4/01
Bin Laden -- From Rich to Evil NY Times 9/30/01
What are the peace groups smoking? The Orlando Sentinel 9/28/01
Index of bin Laden Articles NY Times 9/26/01
Jackleg ragtag Taleban cannot exist without bin Laden London Times 9/26/01
Bin Laden is a modern tactician of rare genius London Independent 9/24/01
Countries supporting USA against terrorism Toronto Star 9/24/01
Internet Terrorist Attack Rumors - True or False? NY Times 9/23/01
What is Islam and why the Holy War? London Independent 9/21/01
How Did Afghans Become Bad Guys? Wall Street Journal 9/19/01
$500 SkFriends Red Cross Pledge 9/18/01
Unsung Heroes -- WHAT WE FIGHT TO PROTECT by Maggie Gallagher 9/18/01
Holy Warriors Escalate an Old War on a New Front NY Times 9/16/01
Bomb Afghanistan and Bin Laden Wins by Tamin Ansary 9/15/01 (
True)
New York Times Front Page 9/12/01
How To Book of Terrorism NY Times 4/5/01
CIA Fact Sheet -- Osama bin Laden  (Unclassified)
FBI Ten Most Wanted -- Osama bin Laden

Attack photos
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