In Memory of Kathy Nancy Mazza

In Memory of Kathy Nancy Mazza

Captain Kathy Nancy Mazza was 46 years old and from Farmingdale, New York.

Kathy was the first female commanding officer of the Port Authority Police Academy. On September 11, 2001, she joined her colleagues at the World Trade Center. There she shot open a glass panel wall after a revolving door became jammed with debris allowing hundreds to escape the horror that was unfolding inside the building. She was last seen with Lieutenant Robert D. Cirri as they were helping carry a woman down the stairs when the building collapsed.

In February 2002, Kathy and the four other Port Authority Police Officers were found in the rubble of the North Tower. Beside them was the body of the woman still strapped in a rescue chair.

For Remembrance Day 2011 - Melissa Harrington-Hughes 9 11 Telephone Message



We must never forget them

On September 11, 2001, Melissa Harrington-Hughes (31 years old), was in New York for one day to oversee her software firm's merger. Melissa was on the 101st floor in the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

Melissa made a tearful call to her husband, Sean Hughes in San Francisco, but missed him as he was asleep. The full message she left said, "Sean it's me, I just wanted to let you know I love you and I'm stuck in this building in New York. A plane hit the building or a bomb went off, they don't know. But there's lots of smoke, and I just wanted you to know I love you always."

In Memory of Betsy Martinez

In Memory of Betsy Martinez

Betsy Martinez was 33 years old and from New York, N.Y. Betsy worked as an accounts manager for Cantor Fitzgerald in the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

On September 11, 2001, Betsy was somewhere between the 101st and 105th floors of the North Tower of the World Trade Center, when American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the northern facade of Tower. The aircraft, traveling at about 404 knots (465 mph; 748 km/h) and carrying about 10,000 U.S. gallons (38,000 L) of jet fuel, hit between the 93rd and 99th floors.

The damage caused to the North Tower destroyed any means of escape at the impact zone or above it. All stairwells and elevators from the 92nd floor up were rendered impassable, trapping 1,344 people.

Tribute to the Children who lost their lives on 9/11



This is a very emotional tribute video to 9/11's youngest victims. In all, eight children died that day. Five were passengers on American Airlines Flight 77 and three were on United Flight 175.

In Memory of Ruth Magdaline McCourt

In Memory of Ruth Magdaline McCourt

Ruth Magdaline McCourt was 45 years old and from New London, Connecticut. (Born: Cork, Ireland). Ruth and her daughter Juliana Valentine McCourt (4 years old), were passengers on United Airlines Flight 175. On Tuesday, September 11, 2001, at 9:03am, United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the southern facade of the South Tower of the World Trade Center impacting between the 77th and 85th floors.

In the cruellest of twists, Ruth's best friend and Juliana's godmother, Paige Farley-Hackel, had decided to go with them but ended up on a different flight. She was on American Airlines Flight 11, which had crashed into the North Tower minutes earlier.

In Memory of Colleen Ann Barkow

In Memory of Colleen Ann Barkow

Colleen Ann Barkow was 26 years old and from East Windsor, New Jersey. Colleen worked as a facilities director for Cantor Fitzgerald on the 103rd floor in the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

On September 17th, 2001, Colleen's parents received a call from The New York City Medical Examiner's Office to tell them some of Colleen's remains had been found. Their daughter had died of smoke inhalation.

Firemen found her three rings on her body. Her engagement ring, her wedding ring, and her anniversary ring that Danny Barkow had given her in advance of their first wedding anniversary.

"She was a beautiful young woman. She could have been a runway model. She always had a smile for everybody," her father said.

9/11 Victims Remains

An emotionally laden debate over the future resting place of thousands of unidentified remains of Sept. 11 victims is lingering as the attacks' 10th anniversary recedes, with several relatives saying they aren't satisfied with a recent city effort to spread the word about a plan to house the remains in the forthcoming 9/11 museum.

Under pressure from families who oppose the plan, the city outlined it in a letter sent last week to relatives of all the nearly 2,800 people killed at the World Trade Center. The letter came after 17 relatives sued the city to try to get addresses so they could poll the families themselves.

A judge rejected their request last week, but the city, which has maintained that the plans have long been known and families approved them, sent out the letters in hopes of resolving the matter.

"We know how profoundly significant and sensitive this matter is to victims' families," notes the letter from Dr. Charles Hirsch, the city's chief medical examiner, and Joe Daniels, the president of the National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum, which counts some victims' relatives as board members.

At the other sites where hijacked planes crashed on Sept. 11, 2001, the placement of unidentified remains has been resolved. Those from the Pentagon, where American Airlines Flight 77 crashed, were buried at Arlington National Cemetery on the first anniversary of the attacks. Three caskets of unidentified remains from the crash of United Airlines Flight 93 in a field in Shanksville, Pa., were buried there this September.

To the trade center victims' relatives who sued, the letter doesn't settle their dispute, which reflects years of strife over the search for and handling of victims' remains.

Remains have never been identified for more than 1,100 people killed at the site. With the subterranean museum still under construction, about 9,000 pieces of unidentified remains are now in a weatherproof tent along the East River in Manhattan, near the medical examiners' office.

The current plan calls for moving them in 2013 to a private repository in the museum, according to the letter. The repository would be off limits to the public, behind a wall inscribed with a quote from the Roman poet Virgil: "No day shall erase you from the memory of time."

There would be a private viewing area for families, who wouldn't be charged the museum's potential $20 admission fee and would be allowed to visit after hours, the letter notes.

Regardless, the objecting families feel a museum is no place for their loved ones' remains. They bristle at the prospect of passing a gift shop and tourists on their way to pay respects 70 feet underground. They want the remains to be put in a separate space on the memorial plaza that opened this Sept. 11, seeing that as a more respectful treatment.

"I think that would bring some more reverence to it," says Jim Riches, a retired firefighter who lost his firefighter son Jimmy in the attack.

Riches and others who sued want to survey the full roster of trade center victims' families to gauge opinion, something the city's letter doesn't invite.

"The fact that a letter went out is positive, but it's not adequate because it ignores the most important part, from the (families') perspective, which is the input," said their lawyer, Norman Siegel. His clients are considering appealing the court's denial of their bid for access to the city's full list of 9/11 families' names and addresses, he said.

Manhattan state Supreme Court Justice Cynthia Kern said in an Oct. 25 ruling that turning over the list would invade the other families' privacy and that the city's letter "clearly and explicitly informs" them.

The families had said any privacy concerns could be allayed by giving the list only to a retired judge who could send out a survey to the 2,752 trade center victims' next of kin. But the city argued that state public records law would require releasing the list publicly if it were released at all, and that would subject families to unwelcome solicitations.

City lawyer Thaddeus Hackworth said officials were glad the court agreed that releasing the list would compromise the families' privacy.

"The mailing sent by the 9/11 Memorial and the Office of Chief Medical Examiner added to the abundance of information that families already had received regarding the plans," he added in a statement Tuesday.

Memorial officials had no immediate reaction.

Identifying, finding and determining a resting place for remains has been a fraught issue for some victims' families since the 2001 attacks.

After Hirsch stopped trying to make identifications in 2005, saying the effort had reached the limits of DNA technology, the discovery of human remains on a bank tower roof and in a manhole near ground zero a year later outraged families who said the search for their loved ones had been rushed initially. The findings prompted a renewed search that cost the city tens of millions of dollars and uncovered 1,500 pieces of remains.

Meanwhile, some victims' relatives sued the city over its decision to move 1.6 million tons of materials from the trade center site to a landfill, saying the material might contain victims' ashes and should have been given a proper burial. The city said it had searched the material diligently for remains, which the families' disputed. Federal judges sided with the city, and the case came to an end when the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear it last year.

3000 Rose Petals



3000 Rose Petals by Magdalena Taber

"Living just around the corner from Boston's Logan International Airport, I am still being reminded of 911 by the airplanes flying low over my head. But it is another memory that prompted me to arrange and perform a touching tribute on the 10th anniversary of the event. From a distance, the images of people jumping out of the windows of the towers appeared so serene... 10 years later, I counted 3000 rose petals and along with other artists friends dispersed them into the ocean. The gentle breeze of a perfect September day carried the petals away, while the airplanes flew so close above us. Full of symbolism, an art video documenting the tribute is now available for sharing on Youtube. Each name of the victims is typed into a heart wrenching mosaic, yet it is not an image of defeat, but resilience and hope." Magdalena Taber.

In Memory of Wendy Alice Rosario Wakeford

In Memory of Wendy Alice Rosario Wakeford

Wendy Alice Rosario Wakeford was 40 years old and from New York, N.Y. Wendy worked as a broker's assistant for Cantor Fitzgerald, the firm that lost the most people in the New York City attacks. Wendy was on the 105th floor of the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

In Memory of Christine Johnna Barbuto

In Memory of Christine Johnna Barbuto

Christine Johnna Barbuto was 32 years old and from Brookline, Massachusetts, (Born: Winchester, Massachusetts). Christine was a passenger on American Airlines Flight 11.

At 8.46am on September 11, 2001, American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the northern facade of the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

Christine Johnna Barbuto Memorial Website

In Memory of Yelena Melnichenko

In Memory of Yelena Melnichenko

Yelena Melnichenko was 28 years old and from Brooklyn, N.Y. (Born: Vilnus, Lithuania). Yelena worked for Marsh & McLennan Cos. Inc. on the 96th floor in the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

"Your mother, Nina Gavriusina, died on 2008.03.02. Her heart stopped after more than a year of struggle with a brain tumor and two successful surgeries. She loved you so much and died after the loss. You'll be together, and will be waiting for me" Vladimir, father of Yelena.

In Memory of Jill Marie Campbell

In Memory of Jill Marie Campbell

Jill Marie Campbell was 31 years old and from New York, NY. Jill worked as an administrative assistant for Baseline Financial Services on the 78th floor in the South Tower of the World Trade Center.

On Tuesday, September 11, 2001, at 9:03am, United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into the southern facade of the South Tower of the World Trade Center impacting between the 77th and 85th floors.

In Memory of Karen Susan Navarro

In Memory of Karen Susan Navarro

Karen Susan Navarro was 30 years old and from Oakland Gardens, New York. Karen worked for Carr Futures, Inc. on the 92nd floor in the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

Karen worked just as hard at everything she did. She had studied to be a teacher and loved children, but went to work in finance instead. She was an assistant on the foreign exchange trading desk of Carr Futures, a fast-paced job that required a high energy level and suited her personality just fine.

"It was a very demanding job, but she enjoyed the challenge," said her father, Edward. "You have to be young and motivated to work those kinds of hours."

In Memory of Amy Nicole Jarret

In Memory of Amy Nicole Jarret

Amy Nicole Jarret was 28 years old and from North Smithfield, Rhode Island. Amy was a flight attendant on United Airlines 175. At 9:03 a.m on September 11, 2001, Flight 175 crashed into the South Tower of the World Trade Center.

Her father, Aram Jarret, said his daughter was hopelessly in love with her college boyfriend and that a glittering diamond engagement ring seemed only months away. She was a rabid Notre Dame football fan who would call her dad in tears if the Fighting Irish were losing at halftime.

"She was wonderful," Mr Jarret said.

Roselle - American Hero Dog of the Year

Computer sales manager Michael Hingson was at his desk on the 78th floor of the World Trade Center's north tower on the morning of 9/11 when American Airlines Flight 11 crashed into the other side of the building, 18 floors above. And he lived to tell the tale because of his guide dog, Roselle.

The yellow labrador calmly guided her owner 1,463 steps out of the building and, as debris fell and dust billowed, found a subway station and led them both underground to safety.

Roselle died in June 2011 at the age 13, but her heroism lives on. At a star-studded red carpet event in L.A. on Saturday night the yellow lab was honored as the American Hero Dog of the Year.

Just as they got out of the building on 9/11, the south tower collapsed. "While everyone ran in panic, Roselle remained totally focused on her job," Michael Hingson said, "While debris fell around us, and even hit us, Roselle stayed calm."

Read - Thunder Dog: A Blind Man, His Guide Dog, and the Triumph of Trust at Ground Zero

In Memory of Christine Anne Olender

In Memory of Christine Anne Olender

Christine Anne Olender was 39 years old and from New York, N.Y. Christine worked at Windows On The World, where she was the restaurant's assistant general manager.

On the morning of September 11, 2001, Christine was hosting the Risk Waters Group for breakfast. At 8:46 am. American Flight 11 impacted the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Christine took immediate control of her area of responsibility after the plane hit. She organized all the breakfast guests and employees on the 106th floor, and made several calls to the Port Authority.

In Memory of Dianne T. Signer and her unborn child

In Memory of Dianne T. Signer and her unborn child

Dianne T. Signer was 32 and from Middle Village, Queens, N.Y. Dianne worked for Fred Alger Management, Inc. on the 93rd floor in the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

Dianne is one of 11 pregnancies acknowledged among the nearly 3,000 names inscribed in bronze around the footprints of the Twin Towers.

Pennsylvania commemorates 9/11 victims



Flight 93 National Memorial dedication on September 10th, 2011, the day before the 10th anniversary of the crash of Flight 93

Former Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton gave impassioned speeches; singer/songwriter Sarah McLachlan performed her hits, "In The Arms Of The Angel" and "I Will Remember You", in tribute to the 40 heroic passengers of United Airlines Flight 93.

About Flight 93
United Airlines Flight 93 was United Airlines' scheduled morning transcontinental flight across the United States from Newark International Airport in Newark, New Jersey, to San Francisco International Airport in California. On Tuesday, September 11, 2001, the Boeing 757–222 aircraft operating the route was hijacked by four al-Qaeda terrorists as part of the September 11 attacks. It subsequently crashed into a field near Shanksville in Stonycreek Township in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, during an attempt by some of the passengers to regain control.

In Memory of Suria Rachel Emma Clarke

In Memory of Suria Rachel Emma Clarke

Suria Rachel Emma Clarke was 30 years old and from Brooklyn, New York. (Born: Sheffield, England). Suria worked for Cantor Fitzgerald on the 105th floor of the North Tower at the World Trade Center.

At 8.30am on September 11, 2001, Suria emailed a friend to fix a lunch date. Sixteen minutes later, the first plane crashed into the North Tower 20 floors below her. There was no escape.

"I knew that somewhere in that was my daughter, but I was there six weeks later, staying in a hotel way up in New York, but you could see the steam and the smoke still rising from there, so the temperature levels down below would have been very, very high. Science just told you. Things went straight down the middle and would have been going down through a gigantic coffee grinder and then been being cooked, really, I suppose." (Suria's father, John).

Never Forget

The 9/11 Memorial
The 9/11 Memorial is located at the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan, New York. The Memorial is a national tribute of remembrance and honor to the 2,983 people killed in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001 and February 26, 1993.

In Memory of,

The 9/11 rescue dogs

During the chaos of the 9/11 attacks, where almost 3,000 people died, nearly 100 loyal search and rescue dogs and their brave owners scoured Ground Zero for survivors.

Now, ten years on, just 12 of these heroic canines survive, and they have been commemorated in a touching series of portraits entitled 'Retrieved'.

The dogs worked tirelessly to search for anyone trapped alive in the rubble, along with countless emergency service workers and members of the public.

Read the full article with pictures at the Daily Mail

In Memory of Michelle Renee Bratton

In Memory of Michelle Renee Bratton
Michelle Renee Bratton was 23 years old and lived in Yonkers, N.Y. (Born: Long Island). Michelle worked for Cantor Fitzgerald on the 105th floor of the North Tower at the World Trade Center.

In Memory of Christopher Hanley


Christopher Hanley was 34 years old and from New York, NY.

On the the morning of September 11, 2001, Christopher was attending a breakfast conference sponsored by Risk Waters Group at Windows on the World on the 106th floor of the North Tower at the World Trade Center. Only minutes after American Airlines Flight 11 hit between the 93rd and 97th floors, Christopher managed to dial 9-1-1 to report the explosion.

The video above is the actual 9-1-1 call that Christopher made on 9/11. The first photograph shows a picture of Christopher Hanley, the second photograph shown in the video was actually taken at Windows On The World that morning and shows Christopher Hanley (on the left) talking to another conference guest William "Bill" Kelly Jr. The photographer who took the picture left the building just before the plane struck the tower. Both Christopher Hanley and Bill Kelly did not survive.

In Memory of Colleen M. Supinski

In Memory of Colleen M. Supinski
Colleen M. Supinski was 27 years old. Colleen worked for Sandler O'Neill + Partners on the 104th floor in the South Tower of the World Trade Center.

In Memory of Liam Joseph Colhoun

In Memory of Liam Joseph Colhoun
Liam Joseph Colhoun was 34 years old from Flushing, N.Y. Liam worked for Bank of America Corporation on the 82nd floor of the North Tower at the World Trade Center.

9-11 widow will speak at luncheon Thursday

A woman whose husband was killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and later founded a nonprofit organization that provides support to widows in Afghanistan will speak Thursday in Milwaukee.

Susan Retik co-founded Beyond the 11th and was featured in "Beyond Belief," a documentary about two Sept. 11 widows who coped with their grief through humanitarian programs that help Afghan widows. The organization has offered literacy classes, job skills training and microlending to help Afghan women start businesses. Susan's husband, David E. Retik, died aboard American Airlines Flight 11, the first plane to crash into the World Trade Center.

Retik, who received the Presidential Citizens Medal in 2010, will speak during a luncheon event at the Pfister Hotel. Tickets are $50.

The event is sponsored by Mount Mary College. Online registration for the luncheon and Retik's speech can be done at mtmary.edu/beyondthe11th.html.

The documentary "Beyond Belief" will be shown at 6 p.m. Friday at Mount Mary College in Room 109 of the Gerhardinger Center. The film is free.

September 11th, 2001: The Enduring Health Legacy

This timely piece illustrates the catastrophic damage and detrimental health effects that the events of 9/11 left in its path. Check out the infographic here: Mesothelioma Cancer Alliance

In Memory of Judy Larocque

In Memory of Judy Larocque
Judy Larocque was 50 years old and from Framingham, Massachusetts. Judy was a passenger on Americans Airline Flight 11. Judy was an avid Beatles fan.

On Tuesday, September 11, 2001 the aircraft crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center at 08;46.

Boston Garden of Remembrance
Sisters Carie and Danielle Lemack whose mother Judy Larocque died on 9/11, grieve in Boston at the Garden of Remembrance, a memorial dedicated to the 206 Massachusetts victims of September 11, 2001.

In Memory of Lorraine D. Antigua

In Memory of Lorraine D. Antigua

Lorraine Antigua was 32 years old and from Middletown, New Jersey. Lorraine worked for Cantor Fitzgerald on the 104th floor of the North Tower of the World Trade Center.

On September 11, 2001, Cantor Fitzgerald lost 658 employees (all of the employees in the office at the time of the attacks), or about two-thirds of its workforce, considerably more than any other of the World Trade Center tenants.

Lorraine Antigua memorial stone
Lorraine Antigua memorial stone in Middletown, NJ.

"My daughter was a single parent raising two children. She was a great Mom and a wonderful friend. She will stop everything to help someone in need! We miss her a lot and she will always be in our minds and hearts!" (Lorraine's mother).