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Home > 2001 > October (Web-only)Christianity Today, October (Web-only), 2001  |   |  
"Beamer's Faith, Competitive Streak Set Scene for Flight 93 Heroism"
Friends say Wheaton grad's determination made him a hero



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Those who knew Todd Beamer as a boy and young man in Wheaton, Illinois, did not foresee how he would become a national hero on September 11. But his teachers, friends, and coaches say the easygoing Beamer had a competitive streak and strong faith that prepared him to act decisively in an emergency.

Beamer, 32, was one of several passengers who interfered with hijackers on United Flight 93, causing the Boeing 757 to crash into a Pennsylvania field instead of into a presumed target 20 minutes away in Washington, D.C. His last known words, "Let's roll," have become a rallying cry for many in the wake of the terrorist attacks.

Until he died, Beamer was a resident of Cranbury, New Jersey. A sales account manager for Oracle Corporation, Beamer was traveling on business. Beamer was born in Flint, Michigan, and attended grammar school, most of high school, and college in Wheaton, a prosperous suburb of Chicago.

David Kohlmeyer, a friend and teammate through grammar school and high school, said he was glad Beamer was on his team. Beamer always seemed to come out on top in their friendly one-on-one competitions.

"He was just tough to beat," Kohlmeyer said, chuckling. "We were close in skill, but whenever we played, he just seemed to have my number."

Although Beamer was ruthless on the court or field, friends say he was friendly and relaxed when the game was over.

Steve Clum, who taught Beamer in fifth grade at Wheaton Christian Grammar School, remembered Beamer as a "quiet young man with inner strength." Clum said Beamer defended classmates who were teased.

T.J. Bean, who played pickup games with Beamer at Wheaton College, noted the same combination of resolve and gentleness.

"He was intense when he competed, but as soon as he was out of the athletic arena, he was a really sweet guy," Bean said.

Beamer's college roommate, Keith Franz, said Beamer was "the kind of guy everybody wanted to be friends with—and I think everybody was." Franz and Beamer served as "close dating advisers" and were best men at each other's weddings, Franz said.

When their families got together just 10 days before Beamer's death, Franz said, Lisa Beamer told his wife that David, 3, and Andrew, 1, "would go ballistic every time he walked in the door."

Lisa Beamer is expecting the couple's third child in January. The Beamers had been married for seven years.

Friends say Beamer had pulled through in smaller crises before.

Roger Burgess coached Beamer and Kohlmeyer in junior high soccer and basketball. "When the game was on the line, you wanted him to have the ball," Burgess said. He opened a worn green record book to an especially memorable game for Beamer's seventh-grade basketball team. Beamer was fouled with two seconds left in the game, and the team was down by one point. Beamer made two foul shots to win the game.

Kohlmeyer remembers the same game. "He always made it in a clutch," he said.

Bean said that Beamer's determination made him a hero. "When it came down to the last minutes on Flight 93, he was the one you wanted on that plane," Bean said. "When you needed someone to get the job done, he was the one."

Those who knew him agree that Beamer's belief in God helped him in the crisis.

During his last phone call, Beamer recited the Lord's Prayer with Lisa Jefferson, a gte Airfone operator. Stan Ueland, another friend from Wheaton College, noted that Beamer's priorities were clear in his final conversation. Beamer spoke of his family and faith, Ueland said, "then he did what he had to do."





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