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MY INVOLVEMENT IN THE MURRAH BOMBING

4/19/2025

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The Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum is a necessary reminder of the evil that shook the ground it stands on—​the worst act of domestic terrorism that shook this state and nation to its core—​​on April 19th, 1995. If you have never been there, I hope you will make the trip to remember what happened there all those years ago.

Even now, all these years later, my memory of that tragic day has not dulled. Even though the devastation of that day did not touch me directly, as it did so many others that lost friends and loved ones, it did mark me permanently because of my involvement in the events at the Murrah Building that day and in days to come, on which I will write more later. Right now, I just want to share what I remember about that day, as it took shape for me. And I welcome you to share with me in the comments below what you remember about that day as it took shape for you.
On that morning, twelve days after my twentieth birthday, I was enjoying the sunshine and the crisp freshness of a gentle breeze as I built concrete forms for a sidewalk on a street in south Oklahoma City, in a housing edition near the Lightning Creek drainage basin. (I was working for FlintCo Construction, on the crew that built the large concrete channel running from SW 89th to SW 86th, just under halfway between Penn and May.) However, the tranquility of the pleasant spring weather was violently disturbed at 9:02, as I was knelt down in the dirt, setting a string-line. I heard a double-clap boom from the north, then felt a concussion, it seemed in the air and ground at the same time—a strange and sickening sensation. I stood up and looked in the direction of what I thought sounded like an explosion, but couldn't see anything, so I went back to work.

Within ten to fifteen minutes, I received a 911 page from my first wife, and I raced to our yard to call her back, knowing there had to be a connection. She told me that there had been an explosion in downtown Oklahoma City, nearly twelve miles away, where her mother worked for Southwestern Bell directly north across the street from the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building. I immediately left work, and we went looking for her mom in a mass of panicking people, learning somehow along the way that the Murrah Building had been bombed. After a frantic search in bumper-to-bumper traffic (in which I rear-ended someone while looking around), under the possible threat of another bomb and the warning of a forced evacuation, we finally found her mom walking out of the danger zone with another woman. Her building was hit hard by the blast, but she was not seriously hurt.

At 4:30 that afternoon, I was back at our construction yard. A crew of us was set to go back downtown and into the Murrah Building to shore up the structure ahead of the firefighters going in for search-and-rescue. We parked on N. Hudson Avenue, about half a block south and a block and a half west of the Murrah Building, which was on the south side of N.W. 5th, halfway between N. Harvey and N. Robinson, the north face having been blown away by the blast of the bomb. We arrived at the same time as an Allied Steel crane, driven by a young reserve soldier who said to us, “Can you believe it boys? We are facing the enemy right here in our own front yard!” We did not want to believe it, but there was no denying it. We were standing under the dark cloud of terrorism, looking firsthand at the gory carnage of a terrorist attack.
When I walked to the corner of N. Hudson and N.W. 5th, I saw a 2-ton truck axle laying in front of Regency Tower, a high-rise apartment building facing south on the N.E. corner. I learned later that that axle was from the Ryder truck Timothy McVeigh used in the bombing. You can see it in the pictures at the right, in the street where I saw it that day, and on display in the Oklahoma City National Memorial & Museum. The blast launched it into the air, and it crashed down onto the hood of that vehicle a block and a half ( approximately 684 feet) away.

Once we were inside the security perimeter, we were told to wait for structural engineers and the firefighters to decide if it was safe enough for us to go in and start shoring up the structure. While waiting, we worked where needed. We unloaded rolls of chain link fence off a truck. We built wood hand rails to guide foot traffic where people needed to watch their steps. We did any little thing we could to help. Into the chili night, light rain started falling, and I remember thinking how appropriate it was for the sky to weep while we worked.

​I had access to the entire area outside of and up to the building. Though the pictures are not mine, here is some of what I saw (click on each picture to enlarge it):
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PICTURES TAKEN BY ME AT THE OKC BOMBING MUSEUM
As you can imagine, there was an ominous aura over the entire site. It was a literal war zone, from only a split-second attack, with an oppressive sense of devastation. I was a little lightheaded, struck into a state of surreal and sad awe, standing at the edge of the crater made by the bomb and looking into the raw, jagged, gaping face of the 8-story building, processing the sheer scope—​the immensity—of the destruction, knowing that people had once been where nothing then was and that people right then were still inside dead, dying, and trying to survive while trapped in the rubble.

On the wall of a building across and a little up the street, I saw two very large dark spots, side by side, each several feet tall and about three to four feet wide. I was later told that they were from two people who had been blown into the wall of the building, the blast and impact having pulverized and vaporized them into nothing but those blood stains on the wall.

As I walked in the dark among the many charred cars in the parking lot directly across the street, I do not know why I never thought to look inside their windows. If I had, I would have found the bodies of several people in several cars. They were found the next morning.

Late that night, we got word that we were not going into the building due to the section they had wanted us working in not being safe enough for us to enter at that time. I did not understand the reasoning since we were there to make it safe for the firefighters. We were told to head on home, and we would be called on if needed. I was called on again to be on the demolition crew. I will share some of my experience with that week-long work at another time.

I'm sure I will always remember that day very vividly. I will make a point to. I remember it with emotion that is hard for me to express, but I know that it is good to remember. It is good to remember as part of our history. It is good to remember our vulnerability and mortality. It is good to remember the precious gift of life we still carry on after those that lost their lives. It is good to remember the families still mourning the loss of their loved ones. It is good to remember the survivors still remembering the horror of their experience, as fresh now as it was then, ​some of them reminded by their scarred bodies. It is good to remember in prayer how they and we all still need the help, healing, and protection of Almighty God. It is good to remember to humble ourselves before Him, looking for and trusting in His sovereign goodness as we face real evil still intent on doing us horrific harm.

May God remember us in His mercy. May God bless us and keep us and make His face shine on us in the grace and truth He has given to us in His Son, Jesus Christ—​​in His ultimate triumph of His goodness over evil, here and around the world. Even in this, to Him be the glory now and forever.
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  • HOME
  • ABOUT
  • SERMONS
    • ASSORTED SERMONS
    • SERIES: GOD REVEALED (PSALM 19)
    • SERIES: CONTEND FOR THE FAITH (JUDE)
    • SERIES: IN ORDER & DOING GOOD (TITUS)
    • SERIES: EACH TO HIS OWN
    • SERIES: THE GOOD NEWS OF THE GREAT PHYSICIAN (LUKE)
    • SERIES: UNBREAKABLE (ROMANS 8:28-30)
    • SERIES: A NEW PEOPLE WITH A NEW PURPOSE IN A NEW PLACE
  • ARTICLES
  • MORE
    • STATEMENT OF FAITH
    • HOW IS ONE TRULY SAVED?
    • ONE WRONG BITE
    • UNBREAKABLE
    • CONTACT