09.09.2021
4 min read

‘Never before seen’ photos of 9/11 terror attack released by US secret service

Almost 20 years on from the tragic day, new images, including an eerie photo taken at Ground Zero after the Tower’s collapse, have been released.
Haven Daley and Jocelyn GeckerBy Haven Daley and Jocelyn Gecker

Iconic vision of the last Tasmanian Tiger colourised

The US Secret Service has released several never-before-seen photos of 9/11 to mark the attack’s upcoming 20th anniversary.

Since Tuesday, the organisation has released six images, including an eerie photo taken at Ground Zero after the Tower’s collapse.

Another photo, taken by a Secret Service employee, shows smoke billowing from the World Trade Centre towers after both planes struck the buildings.

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During the attacks on the morning of September 11, 2001, almost 3000 people were killed, including more than 2600 at the World Trade Centre in New York.

Another 125 people died at the Pentagon and 265 on the four planes that were hijacked.

A never-before-seen photo of the attacks, taken by a Secret Service employee. Credit: U.S. Secret Service/Twitter
A never-before-seen photo from Ground Zero after the Towers collapsed. Credit: U.S. Secret Service/Twitter

More than 20,000 people were injured.

‘Scars forever’

Twenty years after the attack, Jack Grandcolas still remembers waking up at 7.03 that morning.

He looked at the clock, then out the window where an image in the sky caught his eye - a fleeting vision that looked like an angel ascending. He didn’t know it yet, but that was the moment his life changed.

On the other side of the country, it was 10.03am and United Flight 93 had just crashed into a Pennsylvania field.

His wife, Lauren, was not supposed to be on that flight.

Never-before-seen photos show some of the armored limousines parked at the former Secret Service New York Field Office. Credit: U.S. Secret Service/Twitter
Never-before-seen photos show some of the armored limousines parked at the former Secret Service New York Field Office. Credit: U.S. Secret Service/Twitter

So when he turned on the television and saw the chilling scenes of September 11, 2001, unfolding, he was not worried for her.

Then he saw the blinking light on the answering machine.

Lauren had left two messages that morning, as he slept with the phone ringer off in the bedroom.

First, with good news that she was taking an earlier flight from New Jersey home to San Francisco.

Then she called from the plane. There was “a little problem”, his wife said, but she was “comfortable for now”. She did not say she would call back, Grandcolas recalls.

Jack Grandcolas and his wife, Lauren. Credit: AP

She said: “I love you more than anything, just know that. Please tell my family I love them too. Goodbye, honey.”

“That moment I looked over at the television and there was a smouldering hole on the ground in Pennsylvania. They said it was United Flight 93,” said Grandcolas, 58.

“That’s when I dropped to the ground.”

All 44 people on board were killed. Lauren was 38 years old and three months pregnant with their first child.

She had travelled east to attend her grandmother’s funeral in New Jersey, and then stayed a few extra days to announce the pregnancy - a little “good news to lift the spirits of her parents and sisters after burying their grandmother”, Grandcolas said.

Flight 93 was the fourth and final plane to be hijacked on September 11 by four al-Qaeda terrorists on a suicide mission aimed at the Capitol in Washington DC.

Passengers and crew members used seatback phones to call loved ones and authorities and learned of the first two attacks, on the World Trade Center in New York City and the Pentagon in Washington DC.

Realising their hijacking was part of a broader attack, they took a vote to fight back and try to gain control of the plane. It was a heroic act that spared countless more lives.

“What they did was amazingly dramatic,” Grandcolas said. It was “a selfless act of love to conquer hate”.

20th anniversary

For years, Grandcolas bristled at the term “9/11 anniversary”. An anniversary is something to celebrate.

But the 20th anniversary is an important one, Grandcolas said, adding that he plans to travel to Pennsylvania to visit the Flight 93 National Memorial for the first time since 2003.

“Every year it’s a gut punch,” he said in an interview near his home in Pebble Beach, south of Santa Cruz in California. “We will live with the scars the rest of our lives.”

A plaque honours Lauren Grandcolas. Credit: Haven Daley/AP

Grandcolas struggled with depression and survivor’s guilt in the aftermath of the tragedy.

With the help of therapy, he came to see Lauren’s message from the plane as meant to reassure him and her family and “to let us know that she was OK with what was transpiring”.

That unworldly image he saw in the sky the morning of September 11 took on new meaning as he healed.

“It didn’t dawn on me until later that the vision was Lauren.” He would hear her voice in times of struggle, telling him to get up and keep living his life.

Jack Grandcolas. Credit: Haven Daley/AP

Grandcolas eventually remarried. Today, he’s semi-retired from his career as an advertising executive. He is writing a book about the grieving process that will be a tribute to his unborn child.

On the 20th anniversary, Grandcolas finds himself thinking back to how the country came together after 9/11, which he sees as a stark contrast to the division plaguing America today.

“This country was united from sea to shining sea, and today, maybe now, would be a good time to let the divisiveness drop,” he said.

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