Woman Running Cross-Country to Honor 9/11 Victims

Woman Running Cross-Country to Honor 9/11 Victims

Jan Walker poses for a photo in front of a mountain range during her four-month journey across the U.S. She is standing beside a road as she wheels her belongings in a cart behind her.
Jan Walker during her four-month journey across the US. Photo courtesy of Jan Walker from the Rise Up for the Fallen Facebook page.

A woman from Knoxville, Tenn., is running across the United States on a four-month journey in honor of the victims of the Sept. 11 attacks.

Jan Walker began her journey in California in March and she plans to reach the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial by this summer. Her goal is to raise awareness to establish the September 11th National Memorial Trail, an 1,100-mile route planned to stretch between the three crash sites, the 9/11 Memorial in New York, the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pa., and the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial in Arlington, Va. 

"The tragedies of that day affected everyone," Walker told KTAR News. "As an American, I believe that it touches everyone."

Walker regularly posts about her journey on the Rise Up for the Fallen Facebook page.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

Remembering Charles S. Hirsch, Chief Medical Examiner on 9/11

Remembering Charles S. Hirsch, Chief Medical Examiner on 9/11

This portrait photo shows Dr. Charles Hirsch in a suit and tie.
Dr. Charles S. Hirsch. Photo courtesy of the NYC Office of Chief Medical Examiner (OCME).

Over the weekend, news spread quickly about the death of Dr. Charles S. Hirsch, 79, who served as New York City’s chief medical examiner from 1989 until his retirement in 2013. A consummate professional and public servant, Hirsch navigated thousands of bereaved family members through the awful, bewildering aftermath of 9/11. From Sept. 11 forward, he dedicated the resources of his office to the task of trying to identify the fragmented remains of nearly 2,755 victims killed at the World Trade Center. That forensic quest, which aspired to offer the certainty of proof and the rite of proper burial to relatives whose loved ones intersected with the brutal physics of 9/11, advanced the frontiers of medical technology. Regrettably, it could not provide the all-inclusive information Hirsch had hoped to deliver. At least, not yet, although the mission continues.

Throughout this endeavor, Hirsch offered the gifts of truth and compassion to mourning families. The 9/11 Memorial Museum also benefited from his wisdom. Over the years, he listened to our evolving plans, responded to our questions with facts, and counseled us with insight, patience and deep respect for our mission. We were awed by his untiring devotion to the unprecedented and complex investigation that OCME was spearheading, and by his reverence for human life.

In 2012, Hirsch donated an object to the Museum collection suggestive of this dedication. Gift of Charles Hirsch. Photo by Matt Flynn. On the morning of Sept. 11, Hirsch and six of his aides raced downtown to assess the impact of what many then assumed was a catastrophic airplane accident requiring the setup of a temporary morgue. Hirsch stayed on the scene as conditions grew progressively dangerous, sustaining injuries–including broken ribs–when the North Tower collapsed. After receiving emergency medical treatment, he briefly returned to his First Avenue headquarters before heading south again to tour the ravaged 16-acre site–now referenced as ground zero. While in his office, he removed the pulverized building grit and gray ash from his jacket pocket, along with a few loose coins, and placed these contents in a favorite glass pipe rest on his desk. Until donating it to the Museum, that unusual keepsake remained in his daily sightline, as a reminder of the fate suffered by thousands caught in the vortex and the challenges his staff continued to brave in the pursuit of identifying their remains.

We will miss the profound dignity and humane wisdom of Dr. Hirsch, and offer our condolences to his family, his colleagues and countless members of the 9/11 community touched by his concern.

By Jan Ramirez, 9/11 Memorial Museum Chief Curator and Vice President of Collections

9/11 Memorial Volunteers Share Why They Give Back

9/11 Memorial Volunteers Share Why They Give Back

Docent Jeanmarie Hargrave poses for a photo on the ground level of the 9/11  Memorial Museum.
Docent Jeanmarie Hargrave inside the 9/11 Memorial Museum. Photo by Jin Lee.

After losing her brother T.J. Hargrave on Sept.11, volunteer Jeanmarie Hargrave has found healing in sharing the stories of that day with visitors as a 9/11 Memorial Museum docent.

"People really feel when they’re here," said Hargrave. "You know they’re leaving with something."

Joe de Blasio lost a friend in the attacks and was inspired to volunteer as a way to give back. Even educating Museum visitors about structural artifacts like the World Trade Center steel beams, he said, has brought people together and sparked meaningful conversations. 

As a docent, de Blasio has enjoyed speaking with visitors from around the world and those of his granddaughter’s generation who have no memory of the attacks. "People are really interested in why this event happened," he said.

Hargrave also has found it meaningful to interact with visitors from other countries as a volunteer. "People came from around the world to volunteer at ground zero after 9/11," she said. "There are so many beautiful stories to be told about people helping one another. It’s personal for all of us."

Melissa Narain, a criminology student at John Jay College interested in pursuing a homeland security graduate degree, decided to volunteer in visitor services after seeing a flyer at school.

"Here you can really see what our city and our people have been through, and how strong New York City has been," she said.

In recognition of National Volunteer Week from April 10 through 16, the 9/11 Memorial and Museum thanks its dedicated volunteers and encourages others to get involved. Events for current and prospective volunteers will take place throughout the week, including an opening ceremony and a recruitment table with information about volunteer opportunities.

Also this week, Museum visitors are invited to attend special live talks led by Museum docents in the auditorium weekdays at noon. Each talk will discuss the docent’s personal connection to 9/11, a Museum artifact that embodies that connection, and why he or she volunteers. The live talks are free with Museum admission.

Click here for more information about volunteering.

By Kaylee Skaar, 9/11 Memorial Communications Manager

9/11 Museum Honors Legacy of New York Yankees

9/11 Museum Honors Legacy of New York Yankees

A rain-check Yankees ticket from September 10, 2001, is displayed. The ticket notes that the game will take place on Tuesday, September 11, 2001 at 7:05 p.m.
Rain Check Yankees Tickets from cancelled Sept. 10, 2001 game. Gift of Misty Blount-Chappelle in honor of Carnell E. Chappelle, Alison Yerkey Faith, and David Clayton Faith (US military).

With the Bronx Bombers opening their season yesterday at Yankee Stadium, the 9/11 Memorial and Museum honors the connection between the Yankees and legacy of Sept. 11.

Among the first artifacts on view in the museum’s historic exhibition is a pair of Yankees tickets from Sept. 10, 2001. That night, Yankee Roger Clemons readied to pitch his 6th 20-win season against his former team, the Boston Red Sox. More than 50,000 fans flocked to the original Yankee Stadium in anticipation of the big game. When rain forced a cancellation, the fans were left to find other forms of entertainment.

Many instead turned to “Monday Night Football” to watch the Giants play in Denver. The game went late, past midnight on the East Coast. Workers who usually would have been at their desks the time hijacked flight 11 knifed into the North Tower at 8:46 a.m. were running late. In oral histories recorded for the museum, some survivors credited the decision to watch the football game after the Yankee’s game was rained out for saving their lives that day.Mickey Mantle baseball card donated in memory of Vincent Litto.

These Yankee tickets became a symbol of fate and represent the ways in which small decisions had significant consequences.

The team’s connection to 9/11 also extends to the museum’s memorial exhibition. Inside, lost Yankees fans are remembered through photographs of beaming faces in the stands, artifacts such as baseball caps and jerseys, and recordings of personal recollections from loved ones about their shared affinity for the team.   

One fan who died in the attacks, Brooklyn-born Vincent Litto was at work on the 104th floor of the North Tower. Listen to his best friend and neighbor Rocky R. tell a story about their shared love of their baseball club and how it defined their friendship.

By Jenny Pachucki, 9/11 Memorial Content Strategist  

Students Reflect on 9/11 in Essay Contest

Students Reflect on 9/11 in Essay Contest

 A yellow sunflower sits beside a name at the 9/11 Memorial.
A tribute left on the 9/11 Memorial. Photo by Jin Lee.

First responders and supporters from the city of Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. have once again sponsored an essay contest in which local students can reflect on their understanding of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11.

The second annual September 11th remembrance essay contest, which is open to Palm Beach Gardens residents and the dependents of city employees, requests that students in grades nine to 12 "reflect on how the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 affected our nation and the future of the world."

Building on their successful 2015 contest, the contest is being sponsored by the Palm Beach Gardens Police Foundation, Fire Chief’s Association of Palm Beach County and Palm Beach Gardens Fire-Rescue, according to the Palm Beach Post.

Essay submissions should be between 500 to 700 words and applications are due Aug. 15, 2016. Three winners will be chosen. 

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

Daniels: Another Terrorist Attack Rattles Our World, My Home

Daniels: Another Terrorist Attack Rattles Our World, My Home

The national flag of Belgium is seen among other international flags positioned on a wall at the 9/11 Memorial Museum.
The national flag of Belgium is seen among international flags installed in the 9/11 Memorial Museum. The installation recalls the flags that flew in the mezzanine level of the original Twin Towers. Some of the flags, which were not on display on 9/11, are part of the museum’s collection.

The alerts, via buzzing text messages or emails, come way too frequently. The instinct shared by so many of us each morning is to reflexively look at our phones before we step one foot out of bed, before we even turn the lights on. This morning the first message I saw:

"CBSNY: At least 13 killed in explosions at Brussels airport, metro."

In that short message, the aftermath of another terrorist attack was brought into my family’s home in New York City. The TV goes on, flickering images of twisted metal undoubtedly obscuring the bodies of innocent commuters caught up in the attack, a painful broadcast seen worldwide. Then begins the wait for the slow but certain increase in the toll of those murdered and injured.

How many hundreds or thousands of messages to friends or loved ones were sent by those simply going to work or arriving at the airport right before the literal instant in which they were blown apart? Plans for meeting friends or colleagues for lunch, plans for the next days or weeks or months, ripped away. Families and loved ones never to be the same again. The injured to carry the physical scars for the rest of their lives. In parallel, there are those who are actually celebrating the "success" of this brutal attack. The fact that this notion is not unfathomable, is itself, a terrible reflection on what humanity has suffered through.

The morning routine in my home includes saying goodbye to my middle-school age son. This is the first year he has been entrusted with the responsibility of taking the subway by himself to school in lower Manhattan. This morning I had to decide what I should say as he was rushing out the door to the 1 train at Canal Street. Undoubtedly, I knew that my saying anything or not about Brussels wouldn’t change him or his classmates from hearing the news. As President of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, I do believe deep in my heart that we have a responsibility, a duty, to educate generations about the real world we live in that has this type of terror in it—and also equally as importantly, to express how we as a global community come together with love and limitless compassion in the ensuing aftermath.

Well, what did I do this morning? I remembered the first subway rides that I took living in Manhattan after 9/11. Memories of packed trains, of suspicion. The moments of internal panic and the horror of what unfolded in the heart of this city and its Twin Towers. Simply put, I remember being scared.

No part of me this morning had a safety concern for the city’s subways, we are blessed with the deeply committed and battle-tested NYPD and PAPD. This morning, I just wanted to delay, for at least one more subway ride, having my son sit on his daily subway commute to school thinking about what has happened and the certain and dreadful anxiety that comes with it.

By 9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels

US Navy Ceremonial Guard Presents Flag to 9/11 Memorial

US Navy Ceremonial Guard Presents Flag to 9/11 Memorial

Formally-dressed members of the United States Navy Ceremonial Guard fold an American flag during a ceremony at the 9/11 Memorial.
Members of the United States Navy Ceremonial Guard fold an American flag during a ceremony on the 9/11 Memorial. Photo by Jin Lee.

The United States Navy Ceremonial Guard visited the 9/11 Memorial and Museum on Tuesday and participated in a ceremonial presentation of an American flag.

The flag, which was previously flown at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia, was accepted by President Joe Daniels and Chief People Officer Heidi Hayden, a US Marine veteran, on behalf of the 9/11 Memorial.

"The Navy has had a relationship with the city of New York for hundreds of years, which was only deepened by the terrorist attacks of 9/11," said Command Master Chief Christian Detje. "Today we thank the 9/11 Memorial and Museum for honoring that bond."

The Ceremonial Guard is visiting New York to march in the city’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade and participate in other outreach events.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

Children’s 9/11 Tributes on Display at Flight 93 Memorial

Children’s 9/11 Tributes on Display at Flight 93 Memorial

The Learning Center at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pennsylvania, is seen on a partly sunny day.
The Learning Center is a multipurpose building, where the exhibit “Through Their Eyes” is on display. Photo courtesy of NPS/Brenda Schwartz.

Legos locking to form a plane, small toy firetrucks, stuffed animals and other tributes by children are on display at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, Pa., one of the three attack sites on Sept. 11.

The temporary exhibition “Through Their Eyes” displays these tributes and more that were left behind near or on a fence at a temporary memorial soon after the 2001 attacks.

“Children want to know that their world is safe – that there are helpers to protect them and their families,” Barbara Black, memorial curator and exhibit creator, said in an AP report. “But they are also empathetic and compassionate when others are suffering.”

The passengers of hijacked United Airlines Flight 93 are revered as heroes for fighting back against the terrorists, who crashed the plane into a field. Killed were 40 crew members and passengers, including Todd Beamer, whose last reported words were “let’s roll” as he and other passengers tried to overpower the hijackers. Beamer’s watch, which has the number 11 frozen on the date indicator, is on display in the 9/11 Memorial Museum.

Nearly 3,000 people were killed in New York City, at the Pentagon and in Shanksville on 9/11.

The exhibit is open between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays this month. For more information, visit the National Park Service’s website.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

NYPD Headquarters Displays Portraits of 9/11 Heroes

NYPD Headquarters Displays Portraits of 9/11 Heroes

Stephen Gardner, Anthony Bonano and former NYPD Commissioner William Bratton stand next to a painting of NYPD Deputy Chief Steve Bonano.
Left to right, Stephen Gardner, Anthony Bonano and NYPD Commissioner William Bratton stand next to a painting of NYPD Deputy Chief Steve Bonano. Photo by NYPD

NYPD Commissioner William Bratton joined family members of 9/11 first responders at a luncheon on Feb. 1 to commemorate the extension of the Zadroga Act, according to the New York Daily News.

One of the family members in attendance was Jillian Suarez, daughter of Officer Ramon Suarez, who is depicted in a portrait helping a survivor on 9/11 shortly before he was killed. Jillian Suarez told the Daily News that the portrait of her father touched her heart, "to see how they did the painting, from his chin to every part of his body and the way they captured every moment, including the background."

The portraits were previously exhibited in the Senate Rotunda in Washington D.C. and are now on display inside NYPD Headquarters at 1 Police Plaza.

By Christine Murphy, 9/11 Memorial Administration/Researcher

Artifact Cards Debut as Part of 9/11 Memorial Education Program

Artifact Cards Debut as Part of 9/11 Memorial Education Program

A group of children sit around a table as they participate in an activity station program at the Education Center.
Children visiting the Museum participate in Activity Station program. Photo by Jin Lee.

Beginning this Saturday, artifact cards will be distributed during the Activity Station program in the 9/11 Memorial Museum's Education Center. Intended for ages five through 12, the cards are part of a pilot program and were designed to be used by both children and their caregivers while visiting select artifacts in the Museum's exhibition spaces.

The activities are designed to foster an understanding of different Museum objects by including background information, observation questions, drawing and thinking exercises, and activities to do at home. The pilot program was inspired by the number of children visiting the Museum with adults and those not be able to participate in the various educational programs offered in the Education Center.

Following the completion of the pilot program, the artifact cards will be available online for those who may not have the opportunity to visit the Museum.

By Christine Murphy, Administration / Researcher

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