Art by Randy Pollak
Flames clawed at her back. Black smoke filled the air. Waves of red-hot fire spread across the room.
It was March 25, 1911. Seventeen-year-old Katie Weiner was trapped on the ninth floor of a burning building in New York City.
Moments earlier, fire had broken out at the factory where Katie worked. Now the flames were spreading with lightning speed. Katie had to make a terrible choice.
She could stay and die.
Or she could dive into a moving elevator and hope to survive.
Flames clawed at her back. Smoke filled the air. Fire spread across the room.
It was March 25, 1911. Katie Weiner was 17. And she was trapped on the ninth floor of a burning building.
Moments before, fire had broken out at the factory where Katie worked. The flames were spreading fast. Katie had to make a choice.
She could stay and die.
Or she could dive into a moving elevator and hope to survive.
Flames clawed at her back. Black smoke filled the air. Waves of red-hot fire spread across the room.
It was March 25, 1911, and 17-year-old Katie Weiner was trapped on the ninth floor of a burning building in New York City.
Moments earlier, fire had broken out at the factory where Katie worked. Now the flames were spreading with lightning speed. Katie had to make a terrible decision.
She could stay and die—or she could dive into a moving elevator and hope to survive.