Retired FDNY Commissioner Featured as Special Guest Reader

Retired FDNY Commissioner Featured as Special Guest Reader

Retired FDNY Commissioner Sal Cassano stands next to other firefighters during a ceremony at the 9/11 Memorial.
Retired FDNY Commissioner Sal Cassano (Photo: Joe Woolhead)

Salvatore “Sal” Cassano, retired fire commissioner of the New York City Fire Department, will return to the World Trade Center site on Saturday June 20, 2015 as a special guest for the 9/11 Memorial Museum’s Stories & Art program.

On Sept. 11, 2001, then a commander, Cassano responded to the World Trade Center and survived the collapse of the North Tower by taking shelter under a fire rig parked nearby. He then spent the next few months participating in the rescue and recovery effort. Cassano held every rank in the FDNY before retiring in 2014.

As part of the Stories & Art program, Cassano will speak to children and their guardians about his work since 9/11, helping other communities affected by disasters, such as New Orleans with Hurricane Katrina, and the importance of paying forward the goodwill shown to New York.

“We would have never gotten through this incident, the way we did, without the help of so many different people. . . So, some good has come out of this terrible incident,” Cassano recently said. 

Cassano will read Fireboat: The Heroic Adventures of the John J. Harvey by Maira Kalman, a children’s book that tells the true story of an old NYC fireboat and its capacity to act heroically once again on the day New Yorkers needed it most of all.

Following the story, children will have the opportunity to participate in a related art activity. Participating families will receive a signed copy of the book.

The Stories & Art program is designed for children ages five to 10 and their caregivers visiting the Museum. The program is free and is offered on select Fridays and Saturdays at 2:00 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Space is limited and reservations are recommended

By Jenny Pachucki, Content Strategist

Auction of 9/11 Steel Halted in Virginia

Auction of 9/11 Steel Halted in Virginia

Beams from the North Towers of the World Trade Center rise up to the sky. An American flag is attached to them.
Beams from the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Copyright, The Roanoke Times, reprinted by permission.

The auction of a 9/11 memorial in Salem, Va. has been stopped after 9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels urged halting the sale and preserving the tribute.

The memorial includes beams from the North Tower of the World Trade Center. The monument will now be donated to the city of Salem, according to Tiffany Holland in the Roanoke Times. The story indicates that proceeds from the auction were intended to go to the 9/11 Memorial.

In a letter to the company considering a sale, Daniels said the 9/11 Memorial would not accept the proceeds from the auction.

“I wanted first to inform you that in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, recovered World Trade Center steel remnants have historically been protected, not sold,” Daniels wrote in the letter. “As a result, I find it hard to believe that pieces of Ground Zero steel used to create this memorial in Salem, Virginia, have been put on auction.”

This location in Salem is one of three memorials in that city that are registered in the 9/11 Memorial Registry of tributes around the globe.

By Anthony Guido, 9/11 Memorial Director of Communications

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