Frank De Martini


Francis Albert De Martini was an American architect employed by the Port Authority of New York, the agency that managed the World Trade Center. He was killed in the September 11 attacks when the [1 World Trade Center (1973–2001)|World Trade Center (1971–2001)|North Tower] collapsed.

Background

De Martini was hired in 1993 to assess the damage to the building from the World Trade Center bombing. He later became the construction manager and was in charge of changing of indoor layouts such as wall removal and plumbing rearrangement at request by the occupants.

Death

On September 11, 2001, De Martini and his colleagues Pablo Ortiz, Peter Negron, and Carlos da Costa, were at their offices on the 88th floor of the North Tower when American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the building. De Martini and his coworkers had arrived early and were having coffee with De Martini's wife, Nicole, when the plane struck a few floors above them at 8:46 AM. When the building was hit, all elevators stopped. De Martini and his colleagues worked to help free the people trapped inside the elevators which included Daria Coard,. The men helped clear the entrance to one of the building's three stairwells and directed their fellow occupants to descend to safety.
De Martini assured his wife he would follow her. However, the four men then began gathering tools to find and rescue people.
On the 88th floor, they saved Coard, a elevator worker, many Port Authority workers which included Joanne Ciccolello, Jim Connors, Patricia Cullen, Donald Di Domenico, Elaine Duch, Abdel Elgendy, Gerald Gaeta, Jeffrey Gertler, Donald Jodice, Joseph Light, Moses Lipson, Georgia Oppella, Judith Reese, Anita Serpe, Dorene Smith, Lila Speciner, Frank Varriano, and Gilbert Weinstein. Nicole also escaped with the group, as well as Silverstein Properties workers who had offices on Floor 88. This included Roz Morris and a woman named Slyvia, who was with Morris. Another Silverstein Properties employee who was freed Charles Magee, who died in the attack after staying behind and helping people.
They ascended to the 89th floor, and smashed through drywall next to a blocked door, allowing the occupants of that floor to escape. Varriano helped carry Lipson down the stairs as he was 89, while Gertler and Serpe helped Reese as she was asthmatic. Firefighters would tell Gertler and Serpe to escape so they could help Reese. Reese and those firefighters did not survive.
Larry Silverstein, founder of the company. wasn't at the towers that day due to his wife forcing him to go to a dermatologist's appointment. Another worker for Silverstein Properties, Geoffrey Wharton, was in the Lobby when flight 11 hit. Wharton was one of 4 people to be the last to leave Windows on the World alive.
De Martini, Ortiz, Hanna, Negron, and da Costa went upstairs, where they freed two more groups of people. The first group, consisting of Rick Bryan, Raffaele Cava, Mike Charrio, Dianne DeFontes, Carmella Fischelli, Akane Ito, Nathan Goldwasser, Stephanie Manning, Harold Martin, Tirsa Moya, Ronald Scott, Robert Sibarium, Walter Pilipiak, and Yoshiharu Mori were near the stairwell.
DeFontes was the only person from her company to be in the office at the time. Another coworker, Ailyn Abin, was in the lobby and quickly escaped. The rest of the group came from two companies, MetLife and Cosmos and seeked shelter in DeFontes's office. Mak Hanna was ordered to carry an elderly man down the stairs, which he did along with Moya. The remaining four men freed the second group, which had Evan Frosch, Thomas Haddad, Frances Ledesma, Lynn Simpson, and Sabrina Tirao.
The four men then went up to the 90th floor, and freed more workers, which included Christopher Egan, Richard Eichen, Lucy Gonzalez, and Anne Prosser. They then went to floor 91, and freed 18 people, which included electricians Anthony Segarra, Anthony Vangeli and Michael McQuade. Segarra died of his burns he got from Flight 11 on November 28, 2001. Also out of the 18 people were Vanessa Lawrence, a Scottish painter, and Gerald Wertz, who worked on the 93rd floor. They were in an elevator together and Lawrence was about to get off on her floor. Two workers on the 91st floor, Elizabeth Thompson and Megan Craig also survived. Both women were in the lobby when flight 11 crashed. Thompson was one of 4 people to be the last to leaves Windows On The World. Craig, another artist, entered the lobby to go to work.
Realizing that they couldn't ascend any further, they went down, freeing a further six people from the 86th floor, including Louis Lesce. They then made it to the skylobby, where they freed Anthony Savas, who was stuck in an elevator. John Griffin, a worker for Silverstein Properties who was also on floor 88, also helped free Savas.
Still trying to rescue fellow occupants, De Martini, Ortiz, Negron, and da Costa all died when the North Tower collapsed at 10:28 AM; Hanna was the only one of their crew to survive. De Martini's remains were never found. It has been estimated that 77 people survived the attacks due to their rescue efforts. Victims that the four men encountered included John Griffin, Charles Magee, Anthony Savas, Anthony Segarra, and Judith Reese.
Accounts of De Martini's actions during the attacks were given in the documentaries 9/11: Heroes of the 88th Floor, 9/11: The Twin Towers, and Rise and Fall: The World Trade Center.
At the National September 11 Memorial, De Martini is memorialized at the South Pool, on Panel S-27, along with other first responders.