By JEFF GLOR CBS NEWS April 12, 2019, 6:41 PM
After 34 years, FDNY Battalion Chief Jim McGlynn is retiring. An American hero, he was one of the “Miracle 16” who survived the World Trade Center collapse on 9/11, the last to be pulled from the North Tower. “Any time i’m home somewhere and I see a picture of that building coming down, just coming down straight I realize I am someone down here, and I just shake my head and say OK thank you God,” McGlynn said. On that awful morning, McGlynn was trapped under millions of tons of twisted metal. Then a lieutenant with the FDNY, he had just descended one of the towers, when he turned back to look for a brother who was missing. He was between the third and fourth floors. It took eight seconds for the building to come down. “It sounded like a freight train coming down. The building kind of contorted around you. I tried to find a spot where you might be safe. Got into some kind of a fetal position, said a few prayers and just waited for it to stop,” he said. When he radioed for help, he told them he was in Stairwell B in the North Tower. The call came back, “where is the North Tower?” McGlynn was rescued five hours later and was the last to be pulled out of that stairwell. Nearby, he was treated by medics. “How can you make sense that the stairwell in that building stayed intact,” McGlynn said. “It’s beyond my comprehension.” That day was the defining moment of McGlynn’s life. “It was our Pearl Harbor. It was a call to arms. Your country needs you now,” McGlynn said. But he continued serving for 18 years after 9/11. “It’s tough to say goodbye,” he said. McGlynn’s last day is Monday.
McGlynn was rescued five hours later and was the last to be pulled out of that stairwell. Nearby, he was treated by medics. “How can you make sense that the stairwell in that building stayed intact,” McGlynn said. “It’s beyond my comprehension.” That day was the defining moment of McGlynn’s life. “It was our Pearl Harbor. It was a call to arms. Your country needs you now,” McGlynn said. But he continued serving for 18 years after 9/11. “It’s tough to say goodbye,” he said. McGlynn’s last day is Monday.