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CeeCee <I>Ross</I> Lyles

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CeeCee Ross Lyles

Birth
Fort Pierce, St. Lucie County, Florida, USA
Death
11 Sep 2001 (aged 33)
Shanksville, Somerset County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Fort Pierce, St. Lucie County, Florida, USA Add to Map
Plot
Prayer
Memorial ID
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Toronto Star

Cee Cee Lyles of Ft. Myers, FL, died Sept 11, 2001, a victim of the coordinated terrorist attacks against the United States in New York, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere.

Statue of CeeCee Ross Lyles was a flight attendant on United Airlines Flight 93, the one that crashed in Pennsylvania on 9/11. Although she lived in Ft. Myers when she died, she grew up in Fort Pierce and was a police officer there for six years. She switched careers only ten months before the terror attacks. With four children under her care, she reportedly wanted a less dangerous profession.

CeeCee is known for her phone calls to her husband from the doomed flight, describing the intent of the passengers to retake the plane.

CeeCee's statue was unveiled in 2003, and though there's no plaque or even a name to identify her, everyone in town knows who she is. She has been rendered life-size and stands on the ground, so she seems small for a bronze statue. She wears her United Airlines uniform and looks out over the Intracoastal Waterway; a pretty and peaceful spot.

Location: 600 N. Indian River Dr., Fort Pierce, FLCeeCee Ross Lyles: A Hero of Flight 93
The husband of one of the flight attendants on United Airlines Flight 93 shares his wife's legacy with BET

By Britt Middleton 09/09/2011

---------------------------------------------------

On the morning of September 11, 2001, Lorne Lyles returned home from his 9 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift like any other morning. As a police officer with the Fort Myers Police Department, his job required him to see horrors on a daily basis that many wouldn't hope to see once in a lifetime. Nothing would prepare him for the tragedy that he would face just hours later.

Around 4 a.m. that morning, as he did each morning, he made a wake-up call to his wife of just over a year, CeeCee, a flight attendant with United Airlines.
Before flying the skies, CeeCee Ross Lyles, 33, worked as a police officer with the Fort Myers police department, where she and Lorne, met.

"You know, this was a woman who went through female officer survivor school for the Miami-Dade Police Department," Lyles says of his wife, who had six years on the police force. "This was a tough woman." On the morning of Sept. 11, they talked several times as she made her way to the airport and until she made it to airport security. When she reached security before she boarded UA's Flight 93, she told Lyles she would call him back. That would be one of the last times Lyles, now age 41, would speak to his wife.

He took their young son to school and returned home to sleep, but a barrage of phone calls woke him shortly thereafter. At that point, he had no idea of the terrorist attacks that had taken place that morning.
"I kept hearing the phone ringing in my sleep and I'm like, 'Who would keep calling and keep calling'?" Lyles remembers. "I just sat the phone next to the bed and the next phone call I received was from CeeCee."

CeeCee's words made his heart stop in the moment.

"She said, 'Babe, my flight has been hijacked.'"

The plane, which was en route to San Francisco, had abruptly changed course for Washington, D.C. Four terrorists had taken control of the plane. Lorne immediately thought it was joke, though his wife had never done so before.

CeeCee told Lyles that the crew and passengers onboard Flight 93 had heard about the attacks on the World Trade Center. She told him about the plan to overtake the plane from the four terrorists on board, but she was cut short.

She told Lorne to tell their four sons that she loved them. "She said, 'OK, I got to go, got to go,'" he says, "and next thing I know, I heard some screams, then we got disconnected."

The plane crashed in a grassy field outside Shanksville, Pennsylvania, diverting the terrorist's plan. There were no survivors.

Every day brings the family closer to healing. "Well, just individually, we all handle it differently," Lyles says. Lorne and Cee's four children — two each from previous marriages — were between the ages of 6 and 16 at the time of the attacks and struggled to overcome the grief of losing their mother. Counseling and prayer has helped the family carry on.

For Lyles, this 10-year anniversary of the terrorist attacks is especially significant. It will be a time to reconnect with other surviving family members at the crash site in Shanksville, where he will honor the heroic actions of CeeCee and others onboard Flight 93.

"You know it's something that can never be forgotten," Lorne says. "This is a celebratory thing for me. This is just truly, truly, celebrating my wife's life and her legacy."

The outpouring of support from friends, family members and even strangers has proven just that. In 2003, the city of Fort Pierce, Florida — CeeCee's hometown — erected a bronze statue in Veteran's Park, where CeeCee stands in her full flight attendant's uniform, and installed a plaque in her honor.

Construction for the National Flight 93 Memorial is underway in Shanksville at the site of the crash.

Though CeeCee's life was taken 10 years ago, she is always in Lyles' heart and her spirit will live on forever. "That's my guardian angel," he says. "That's what she is. She is my guardian angel."

***************************************
The city of Fort Pierce will held a 10th anniversary memorial service to honor CeeCee Lyles at 9:30 a.m. Sept. 11 at the Liberty Garden, where the city placed a life-sized bronze statue of her overlooking the Indian River, 600 N. Indian River Drive, Fort Pierce.
Toronto Star

Cee Cee Lyles of Ft. Myers, FL, died Sept 11, 2001, a victim of the coordinated terrorist attacks against the United States in New York, Washington, D.C., and elsewhere.

Statue of CeeCee Ross Lyles was a flight attendant on United Airlines Flight 93, the one that crashed in Pennsylvania on 9/11. Although she lived in Ft. Myers when she died, she grew up in Fort Pierce and was a police officer there for six years. She switched careers only ten months before the terror attacks. With four children under her care, she reportedly wanted a less dangerous profession.

CeeCee is known for her phone calls to her husband from the doomed flight, describing the intent of the passengers to retake the plane.

CeeCee's statue was unveiled in 2003, and though there's no plaque or even a name to identify her, everyone in town knows who she is. She has been rendered life-size and stands on the ground, so she seems small for a bronze statue. She wears her United Airlines uniform and looks out over the Intracoastal Waterway; a pretty and peaceful spot.

Location: 600 N. Indian River Dr., Fort Pierce, FLCeeCee Ross Lyles: A Hero of Flight 93
The husband of one of the flight attendants on United Airlines Flight 93 shares his wife's legacy with BET

By Britt Middleton 09/09/2011

---------------------------------------------------

On the morning of September 11, 2001, Lorne Lyles returned home from his 9 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift like any other morning. As a police officer with the Fort Myers Police Department, his job required him to see horrors on a daily basis that many wouldn't hope to see once in a lifetime. Nothing would prepare him for the tragedy that he would face just hours later.

Around 4 a.m. that morning, as he did each morning, he made a wake-up call to his wife of just over a year, CeeCee, a flight attendant with United Airlines.
Before flying the skies, CeeCee Ross Lyles, 33, worked as a police officer with the Fort Myers police department, where she and Lorne, met.

"You know, this was a woman who went through female officer survivor school for the Miami-Dade Police Department," Lyles says of his wife, who had six years on the police force. "This was a tough woman." On the morning of Sept. 11, they talked several times as she made her way to the airport and until she made it to airport security. When she reached security before she boarded UA's Flight 93, she told Lyles she would call him back. That would be one of the last times Lyles, now age 41, would speak to his wife.

He took their young son to school and returned home to sleep, but a barrage of phone calls woke him shortly thereafter. At that point, he had no idea of the terrorist attacks that had taken place that morning.
"I kept hearing the phone ringing in my sleep and I'm like, 'Who would keep calling and keep calling'?" Lyles remembers. "I just sat the phone next to the bed and the next phone call I received was from CeeCee."

CeeCee's words made his heart stop in the moment.

"She said, 'Babe, my flight has been hijacked.'"

The plane, which was en route to San Francisco, had abruptly changed course for Washington, D.C. Four terrorists had taken control of the plane. Lorne immediately thought it was joke, though his wife had never done so before.

CeeCee told Lyles that the crew and passengers onboard Flight 93 had heard about the attacks on the World Trade Center. She told him about the plan to overtake the plane from the four terrorists on board, but she was cut short.

She told Lorne to tell their four sons that she loved them. "She said, 'OK, I got to go, got to go,'" he says, "and next thing I know, I heard some screams, then we got disconnected."

The plane crashed in a grassy field outside Shanksville, Pennsylvania, diverting the terrorist's plan. There were no survivors.

Every day brings the family closer to healing. "Well, just individually, we all handle it differently," Lyles says. Lorne and Cee's four children — two each from previous marriages — were between the ages of 6 and 16 at the time of the attacks and struggled to overcome the grief of losing their mother. Counseling and prayer has helped the family carry on.

For Lyles, this 10-year anniversary of the terrorist attacks is especially significant. It will be a time to reconnect with other surviving family members at the crash site in Shanksville, where he will honor the heroic actions of CeeCee and others onboard Flight 93.

"You know it's something that can never be forgotten," Lorne says. "This is a celebratory thing for me. This is just truly, truly, celebrating my wife's life and her legacy."

The outpouring of support from friends, family members and even strangers has proven just that. In 2003, the city of Fort Pierce, Florida — CeeCee's hometown — erected a bronze statue in Veteran's Park, where CeeCee stands in her full flight attendant's uniform, and installed a plaque in her honor.

Construction for the National Flight 93 Memorial is underway in Shanksville at the site of the crash.

Though CeeCee's life was taken 10 years ago, she is always in Lyles' heart and her spirit will live on forever. "That's my guardian angel," he says. "That's what she is. She is my guardian angel."

***************************************
The city of Fort Pierce will held a 10th anniversary memorial service to honor CeeCee Lyles at 9:30 a.m. Sept. 11 at the Liberty Garden, where the city placed a life-sized bronze statue of her overlooking the Indian River, 600 N. Indian River Drive, Fort Pierce.


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  • Created by: Ken & Nancy
  • Added: Feb 3, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/65132163/ceecee-lyles: accessed ), memorial page for CeeCee Ross Lyles (25 Nov 1967–11 Sep 2001), Find a Grave Memorial ID 65132163, citing Hillcrest Memorial Gardens, Fort Pierce, St. Lucie County, Florida, USA; Maintained by Ken & Nancy (contributor 46941223).