A Look Back at the 2015 Memorial 5K

A Look Back at the 2015 Memorial 5K

Participants cross the finish line at the 2015 9/11 Memorial 5K Run and Walk. The participants run under a sign saying “Finish” and adorned with more than a dozen American flags.
Participants cross the finish line at the 2015 9/11 Memorial 5K Run/Walk event. (Photo: Jin Lee)

Thank you to everyone who participated on Sunday, April 26 in our third annual 5K Run/Walk and Family Day event. View a photo gallery of the event here.

More than 4,000 people participated in this year’s 5K and thousands attended our Family Day following the race. Family Day included performances from the West Point Band and the American Bombshells and fun activities like the NYPD rock wall. Also joining at Family Day were community partners such as Tails of Hope, New York Says Thank You and Tuesday’s Children.

The 9/11 Memorial Museum would like to thank the NYPD, PAPD and FDNY for their support and participation as volunteers and runners. We also wish to express gratitude to all of our sponsors, including RXR Realty for serving as our title sponsor and Under Armour for being our T-shirt sponsor.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

Exploring the Memorial's Sustainable Design on Earth Day

Exploring the Memorial's Sustainable Design on Earth Day

This autumn aerial of the 9/11 Memorial plaza shows the twin reflecting pools, the Museum pavilion, and the dozens of colorful swamp white oak trees that fill the plaza.
(Photo: Courtesy of Port Authority of New York and New Jersey)

The 9/11 Memorial plaza is one of the most sustainable plazas ever constructed, designed to conserve energy, water and other resources.

Rainwater is collected in storage tanks below the plaza surface and the tanks supply water for the nearly 400 trees and vegetation. With hundreds of trees, the plaza is an actual green roof for the 9/11 Memorial Museum located below it. The plaza was built to meet requirements of New York State Executive Order 111, as well as WTC Sustainable Design Guidelines, both of which promote environmentally friendly practices.

The memorial’s urban forest is close by to other green spaces, including Battery Park City, City Hall Park and Liberty Plaza.

The American Society of Landscape Architects describes the Memorial on its website as a “massive green roof – a fully constructed ecology – that operates on top of multiple structures. … The plaza surface-and-drainage infrastructure is designed to function as a large self-sustaining cistern. Water from rainfall and snow melt is channeled into large holding tanks and re-used to support the Memorial forest via a specialized drip-and-spray irrigation system.”

Read more about the Memorial's design.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

Helmet Symbolizes Resiliency Following 9/11

Helmet Symbolizes Resiliency Following 9/11

Bob Beckwith’s black and red helmet is on display at the 9/11 Memorial Museum’s historical exhibition. The number 164 is on a patch on the front of the helmet.
Bob Beckwith's helmet is on display in the Museum's historical exhibition. (Photo: Amy Dreher)

After the September 11, 2001 attacks, retired FDNY firefighter Bob Beckwith wore this helmet as he volunteered in search efforts at Ground Zero.

Several media outlets have recounted his story: On Sept. 14, 2001, Beckwith stood atop a pile of wreckage next to U.S. President George W. Bush, who was visiting the site. Bush put his arm around Beckwith as he addressed rescue and recovery workers.

When one worker told Bush that he could not hear what he was saying, Bush used a bullhorn and said: “I can hear you! The rest of the world hears you! And the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon!”

The Beckwith family donated the helmet to the 9/11 Memorial and Museum collection. It is on display in the historical exhibition.

By Jordan Friedman, 9/11 Memorial Research and Digital Projects Associate

Volunteer Recalls Meaningful Experience With British Veteran

Volunteer Recalls Meaningful Experience With British Veteran

Eric Brown, a former veteran, places a yellow rose on a bronze parapet at the 9/11 Memorial plaza. The fall-colored leaves of the plaza’s swamp white oaks stand in the background.
Eric Brown, a British man and former veteran, places a yellow rose in the 9/11 Memorial to veterans who died on 9/11. (Photo: Vernoy Paolini)

In honor of National Volunteer Week, April 12-18, 9/11 Memorial volunteer Vernoy Paolini recalls a meaningful experience she had with a visitor on Veterans Day 2014:

On Veteran’s Day last year, we arrived early to assist with placing yellow roses in the names of all veterans on the Memorial who lost their lives on 9/11. What an honor to be a part of that recognition. In the process, we had a chance to chat with several people, including a group of British visitors, some veterans. Many of them wore red poppies for Armistice Day.

We were approached by Eric Brown, an older, misty-eyed British man and former veteran. As he watched us place yellow roses on the parapets, he quietly asked if he could have the honor of placing one of the roses in the name of a veteran on the parapets, too. At the time, all of the veterans had been recognized with a rose, but we felt that we had to make it happen for this proud and determined soldier. I removed a yellow rose from one of the names surrounding the South Tower pool and had Eric place it back into the parapet as we took his photograph.

I could see his heart swell with pride as he fought back more tears to allow his grateful smile to appear. He explained that being a veteran himself and the privilege of placing the rose on the South Tower panels made his visit all the more unforgettable. Getting to recognize an American veteran was an honor he will cherish "’til my dyin' day," he said, adding, "You know we were all grieving with you on 9/11, don't you.”

Veterans Day. Armistice Day. Remembrance Day. No matter what you call it, always make it extraordinary. Eric did that for me.

Vernoy Paolini has been a 9/11 Memorial Museum Docent volunteer since January 2014  and donates 20 hours per month. 

Shoes Symbolize Acts of Compassion During 9/11 Evacuations

Shoes Symbolize Acts of Compassion During 9/11 Evacuations

A pair of brown leather dress shoes owned by a 9/11 survivor are displayed on a white surface in the Museum.
Fred Segro, a 9/11 survivor at the WTC, recently donated these shoes to the Museum. (Photo: Jin Lee)

The 9/11 Memorial Museum recently acquired a new pair of men’s shoes for its permanent collection. The brown oxford shoes were donated by Freg Segro, a consulting IT recruiter and survivor of the 9/11 attacks. Ordinary in appearance, the shoes symbolize the acts of compassion and kindness extended in the face of disaster.

On 9/11, Segro was at work in his office located on the 77th floor of the North Tower. When Flight 11 hit the building at 8:46 a.m., the glass entrance shattered, injuring the pregnant receptionist, Julie, who was at her desk nearby. After tending to Julie’s wounds, Segro and a group of colleagues began a stairwell evacuation.

The stairs were slippery with water from the overhead fire sprinklers, making the descent difficult for Julie, who was wearing high heels. Concerned for her safety, Segro convinced her to leave her shoes, joking that he would later buy her a new pair. Once the group reached the lobby level and saw debris and glass on the floor, Segro removed his own brown oxford shoes and placed them on Julie’s bare feet.

Once safely out of the building, they took the advice of an EMT and made their way to Beekman Downtown Hospital to seek care for Julie’s injuries. Noticing a pair of abandoned women’s shoes along the way, Julie claimed them and returned Segro’s shoes to him.

Julie was treated for her minor injuries and medical staff confirmed that her baby was unharmed. With Julie taken care of, Segro evacuated home to New Jersey via ferry. The shoes changed hands a last time when Segro met with curators on February 23, 2015 to make the donation to the Museum.

Assistant Curator Alexandra Drakakis explains, “They are different from other shoes in the collection because while they don’t show the tell-tale signs of struggle, they represent one person’s commitment to the survival and safety of whoever was wearing them, and that is extraordinary.” 

By Jenny Pachucki, 9/11 Memorial Museum Content Strategist

Collection highlights aftermath of 9/11 attacks

Collection highlights aftermath of 9/11 attacks

IMG_3830-1024x682.jpg

 

Above: Michael Ragsdale discusses pieces of his collection with 9/11 Memorial Museum exhibition researcher Liz Mazucci. (Photo by Michael Frazier)

 

After watching the Sept. 11 attacks unfold, Michael Ragsdale started a personal campaign to collect fliers, cards and brochures that marked the day’s events and the subsequent months.

“I decided to collect stuff that I felt would be ignored,” he said.

Seeing the North Tower on fire, Ragsdale said he knew something unprecedented was happening and sensed the towers may not exist much longer.  He quickly went down to the site, feeling compelled to grab any memorabilia.  He took a couple hundred World Trade Center brochures shortly before the towers fell.

Ragsdale, who has been an autograph collector since 1997, began collecting this 9/11 ephemera over the 14 months following the attacks.

“I had the opportunity to do it, so I did it,” he said.

 

 

Ragsdale collected pieces such as event fliers that organizations handed out on the streets.  One flier read: “Protest Fire Bombings Against Arab Stores."  He also collected warning signs posted around ground zero and the World Trade Center site, including one that said, “Crime Scene Search Area: Stop."

He said the most shocking piece he collected was a sign he got from around ground zero that read “Warning: Poison.”

Ragsdale's ephemera collection was acquired by the National September 11 Memorial & Museum for display in future exhibitions. The collection has more than 4,100 pieces.  These collected items are to become part of the showcases highlighting the aftermath of the attacks.

Image A: A flier posted by the New York City Police Department near ground zero, indicating "Crime Scene Search Area STOP".  Image B: A flier that was handed out asking for volunteers to show support for ground zero rescue workers.

By Meghan Walsh, Communications Associate with the 9/11 Memorial

Subscribe to 9/11 Museum