Interpreting the Last Column: PAPD 37 Markings

An image of the Last Column zooms in on a marking reading “PAPD 37” as well as PAPD and PAPD ESU stickers placed on the Column.
PAPD markings on the Last Column. Rendering by 9/11 Memorial & Museum staff.

Interpreting the Last Column: In this series, 9/11 Memorial & Museum exhibitions staff share the stories behind the markings and tributes placed on the Last Column. The Last Column was the final piece of steel to be removed from the World Trade Center site, marking the completion of the nine-month recovery period. A symbol of resilience and marker of loss, it now stands in the Museum’s Foundation Hall bearing its memorial tributes. If you signed or left a tribute on the column and would like to share your story, please write to exhadmin@911memorial.org.

The Port Authority of New York & New Jersey maintains its own police department to protect and serve all facilities under the agency’s jurisdiction. These include six tunnels and bridges connecting New York and New Jersey, five airports, the PATH rail transit system, the Port Authority Bus Terminal and the World Trade Center.

Thirty-seven members of the Port Authority Police Department (PAPD), including seven members of its Emergency Service Unit (ESU), were killed as a result of the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. This was the greatest loss of personnel of any police force in a single event in American history.

“PAPD 37” was one of the first markings spray painted on the Last Column during the recovery period at Ground Zero. The marking is written in two places on the column. Stickers honoring the PAPD and PAPD ESU were placed alongside one of the markings before the steel column was removed from the site on May 30, 2002. 

Left: Last Column, May 10, 2002. Photograph by Peter Morgan, Reuters. Right: PAPD Detective Thomas McHale removes an American flag from the Last Column, May 28, 2002. Photograph by Kathy Willens, AP Photo.

Left: Last Column, May 10, 2002. Photograph by Peter Morgan, Reuters. Right: PAPD Detective Thomas McHale removes an American flag from the Last Column, May 28, 2002. Photograph by Kathy Willens, AP Photo.

By Emily Edwards, Collections and Exhibitions Coordinator, and Katherine Fleming, Exhibition Coordinator, 9/11 Memorial

Previous Post

9/11 Museum Like a Second Home to Volunteer

Inez Robertson, a Museum volunteer, poses on steps at the Museum as visitors walk by, going up and down the stairs.

Inez Robertson estimates that she was passing through the Chambers Street subway station when Flight 11 hit the North Tower on Sept. 11, 2001.

View Blog Post

Next Post

NYC Street Signs Honor 9/11 Victims

Two street signs memorializing 9/11 victims are displayed on a gray surface at the Museum. One reads Fire Lieutenant Paul R. Martini Way and the second reads Marianne Simone Avenue.

From Broadway to the Bowery, every street in New York tells a story. To memorialize people, events or recent history of various neighborhoods, it’s not uncommon to see streets named or renamed after notable residents and local celebrities, with some names dating back to the 17th century.

View Blog Post