This story first appeared in our sister publication, Irish America magazine, in the December 2001/January 2002 issue.
Quickly, there were demographic trends.
The Cantor Fitzgerald brokerage lost nearly 700 employees, a third of its total. Marsh & McLennan lost 295. Windows on the World restaurant, on top of 1 World Trade Center, lost 75 workers and 93 guests, talking business over bagels and coffee.
And of course, the firefighters of the FDNY, while helping to evacuate some 25,000 people from the Trade Center, lost 343 of their "brothers."
Americans were the target, and of course other nationals also perished.
The Irish government named more than a dozen of its natives among the dead in New York, Washington, D.C. and Pennsylvania.
Based on family names and individual stories, there are many hundreds of American dead with Irish heritage, including Americans who through parents or grandparents had become Irish citizens.
The Web site www.IrishTribute.com, set up in reaction to the September 11 attacks, estimated that perhaps one-sixth of the dead were in some way “Irish.”
"September 11, 2001 may well go down as the bloodiest day in the history of the Irish people," the Web site claims. "An estimated 1000 people who were of Irish descent or of Irish birth were lost in the violent events on that day."
On that warm and sunny Tuesday morning, Tommy Foley was closing out the overnight shift at Rescue 3, in The Bronx.
At age 32, Foley was already a 10-year veteran of the FDNY. It was the job he dreamt of since childhood, when he would visit the Harlem firehouse of a family friend, Firefighter Bob Conroy.
"Tommy Boy ? that's what I call him, ever since he's a little kid," Conroy said, still using the present tense. "I can still see Tommy Boy running around the firehouse in Harlem, running around and getting filthy dirty. It's all he ever wanted to do."
At 8:52 a.m., the call came in. Emergency in Lower Manhattan. An airplane or a helicopter or maybe even bombs, tearing through what New Yorkers call the Twin Towers.
Instead of ending his shift, Tommy reached for his boots. Across the city, the scene was repeated.
The first airliner hit just as scores of firefighters were either coming off duty or arriving to work, thus maximizing the number rushing downtown.
Mike Cawley wasn't even on duty that day with his regular outfit the “Elmhurst Eagles” of Ladder 136, but instinctively he raced to the Towers with another unit, Rescue 4.
A 32-year-old bachelor like Foley, Cawley had been what firemen call a “buff” ever since he was a kid, happily covering shifts for firefighters who had families, and racing toward smoke and flame even when he was off-duty.
On a September 11 when he could have stayed away, Cawley of course could be no place else.
Meanwhile, AnnMarie McHugh had been at her desk inside Tower Two since early that morning. When not working for the EuroBrokers firm, the 35-year-old native of Tuam, County Galway, was busy planning her wedding, just a month away.
Over in Tower One, Mike Armstrong had even less time left before his “big day.” The 34-year-old son of immigrants from County Longford worked for the Cantor Fitzgerald brokerage firm alongside the Lynch brothers, Farrell (39) and Sean (36), whose uncle represents the Sligo-Leitrim constituency in the Irish Senate.
Armstrong, a Manhattan native who was so outgoing and gregarious that his many friends long ago nicknamed him “Posse,” was getting married to longtime girlfriend Cathy Nolan on October 6th.
At Logan Airport, the McCourts waited on standby. Ruth Clifford McCourt, a 44-year-old businesswoman who left her native County Cork as a teenager, was taking four-year-old Juliana on a vacation to Los Angeles. Mother and daughter found seats aboard United Airlines Flight 175.
Shortly after takeoff, of course, Flight 175 was yanked from its flight path by hijackers. As Ruth McCourt's plane hurtled towards Lower Manhattan, it's likely she never knew that her own brother, Ronnie, was attending a business meeting in the very same skyscraper where she and her daughter would meet their fiery end.
Ronnie Clifford would escape the Trade Center without serious injury, only to learn later that one of the two planes that brought the Towers down contained his sister Ruth and niece Juliana.
Panic spread like brushfire across the country, and Navy Commander Robert Dolan was among those called to quell the flames. The 40-year-old husband, father and Little League coach often addressed his military colleagues with speeches that quoted everything from Shakespeare to Monty Python; he was equally adept commanding naval fleets that resemble floating steel cities.
On the morning of September 11, Dolan was in his office on the first floor of the Pentagon's D Ring, among a group hearing reports on that morning's attacks in Lower Manhattan. At 9:43 a.m., American Airlines Flight 77 exploded through Dolan's window.
"Bob Dolan was the best and brightest this country had to offer to the altar of freedom," Lisa Dolan would later write about her husband of nearly 19 years. "We pray his rest is peaceful, although ours cannot be."
The final plane to be hijacked that morning was United Airlines Flight 93. Because its passengers learned by cell phone that the morning's previous hijackings were suicide runs, they obviously deduced there was nothing to lose from being brave.
As Flight 93 rumbled through rural Pennsylvania, passenger Thomas Burnett spoke to his wife in California. "I know we're all going to die," said Burnett, a 38-year-old father of three. "There's three of us who are going to do something about it."
By nature of the phone call to his wife, then, Burnett was among the lucky ones.
With so few survivors pulled from the ruins, and hospitals across New York relatively empty because the dead so outnumbered the physically wounded, there were so many who never got the chance to say goodbye, never got the chance to say "I love you."
Martin Coughlan also got to make that final phone call. Shortly after 9 a.m., the 53-year-old carpenter from Cappawhite, County Tipperary, managed to call home from his jobsite on the 96th floor of Tower One.
"There's been a bomb in the building," Coughlin told his wife, "but I'm OK, and tell the four girls I'll be home for dinner." Many days later, Coughlan's remains were found.
106 stories from safety, Eamon McEneaney also called his wife. The 46-year-old vice-president at Cantor Fitzgerald was a heralded survivor of the 1993 World Trade Center attack, when he calmly covered the mouths of co-workers with wet towels and led human chains down the stairs.
On September 11, the father-of-four left a message at his wife's office: a plane had hit the building, he was on the way out, and he loved her. McEneaney never made it out.
Unlike McEneaney, John O'Neill managed to escape. The 50-year-old former FBI man had been named the Trade Center's Director of Security just two weeks before.
He made it from the 34th floor to the street, from where he called his son to report that he was safe.
Then O'Neill re-entered one of the Towers, joining the human sacrifice that was under way in the name of evacuating others.
In Spring Lake, New Jersey, the McAlarys leapt for joy when their son and brother Bryan phoned to say he had escaped unharmed from his Trade Center office.
They were soon horrified to learn that Bryan's older brother James, a 42-year-old broker, was in the Trade Center that day for a sales meeting. "Jimmy Mac," as he was known to all, never came home.
The McAlarys were but one of many sets of brothers at the scene that day.
At the base of the Towers, Michael Moran of Rescue 3 spoke by cell phone with his big brother John, a 43-year-old Battalion Chief. They were brothers by blood and “brothers” by profession, among the fraternity of the FDNY.
"I told him to be careful," the younger Moran would recall weeks later, at a memorial service for John. "I didn't see him there that day, but now I see him all the time."
Maureen Haskell, a Fire Department widow, sent three of her four boys, Kenny, Timmy and Tommy, to the FDNY.
Timmy, 34, was on the 60th floor of Tower One when the floor dropped beneath him. Nearly two weeks after the attacks, Maureen listened as Kenny gave a eulogy, Timmy's remains lay in a casket, and Tommy was still in Lower Manhattan, one of thousands lost in the mountain of steel and smoke.
"We need to pray for Tommy's safe return . . . I'm sure he's fine," Kenny told those who gathered to bury Timmy, in Seaford, Long Island. "Tommy's probably sitting comfortably down there in a large void, wondering, “what's taking us so long?"
Kenny Haskell vowed to retrieve his brother, as did Danny Foley, who seven years ago had followed his above-mentioned elder brother Tommy into the FDNY.
Danny worked around the clock with rescue crews searching for the brother that he idolized, and nearly two weeks after the attack he addressed mourners at St. Anthony's in Nanuet, New York: "It took 10 days, but a promise I made to my family was kept, when I brought Tommy home."
Danny recalled the nights spent talking across bunk beds to his older brother, discussing what he called their common interests: football, fishing, becoming a firefighter and girls.
In later years, he recalled joking about his big brother's pin-up pose in a firefighter's calendar, a charity fundraiser that led to modeling jobs and appearances among “eligible bachelors” in People and also the Top 100 Irish Americans list published by Irish America magazine.
"I knew someday I wanted to be just like my big brother," Danny recalled. "He's always been a hero to me, and now he's a hero to people around the world."
Bob Conroy, the family friend who earlier recalled the young Tommy Foley running around a Harlem firehouse, and would later become the Foley brothers' FDNY mentor, echoed the sentiments of so many families and friends when he said, "I only wish I could see him one more time – just one more time to tell him how much I love him."
Foley was not the only September 11 victim to have previously appeared in the pages of Irish America magazine.
Of the more than 70 employees lost from Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, two were former honorees among the Irish America Wall Street 50: Chairman & CEO Joe Berry and Executive Vice-President Joseph Lenihan.
Another victim from the same firm, Chris Duffy, was the son of Wall Street 50 honoree John Duffy.
Berry, Lenihan and the two Duffys were among those who attended Irish America's Wall Street 50 reception on July 11, an event that was held annually at Windows on the World restaurant.
At the top of Tower One, the breathtaking view from Windows on the World was the ideal setting to toast the many achievements of the Irish and their descendants in the U.S.
As of September 11, that skyline view has been lost forever, but of course the accomplishments of people like Berry, Lenihan and the Duffys remain.
The accomplishments of others were never recorded and may never be known.
The unborn second child of Damien Meehan will never know daddy first-hand, how he grew up playing Gaelic Football with five brothers in Good Shepherd Parish, Upper Manhattan.
How among the Donegal Meehans of Upper Manhattan, Damien was the first to enter a “safe” profession, becoming a financial foot-soldier on Wall Street, instead of a fireman or a cop.
How on September 11, 2001, the 33-year-old reported to his desk at Carr Futures in Tower One and then disappeared; vanished forever.
In Northern Ireland, they will never know of the woodwork yet to be crafted by 21-year-old Brian Monaghan, who had emigrated to the Meehans' neighborhood in Upper Manhattan.
Joint ceremonies at Good Shepherd Church, Inwood, and St. Patrick's Church, Belfast, recalled the hurdles young Monaghan and his family had overcome to date, and all the promise the young carpenter had left to give.
In Dublin, they memorialized Richard Fitzsimons, who traveled to the Irish capital from Lynbrook, Long Island, just weeks before, to dance at his niece's wedding.
In New Jersey, they play “The Minstrel Boy” just a little bit quieter now in memory of three fallen “Irishmen” of sorts from the Port Authority Pipe Band: Steve Huczko, Liam Callahan and Richard Rodriguez.
In the Bronx, a widow cries because her husband and the father of her two baby girls, 31-year-old cafeteria worker Israel Pabon, left for work at dawn after a minor domestic squabble the night before: "We never got the chance to talk . . ."
The sacrifice is staggering, the waste of life too much to bear.
In Woodside, Queens, and Breezy Point, Brooklyn, families of cops, firemen and brokers with Irish names are forever wounded.
There are Brooklynites like Captain Timmy Stackpole, who just weeks before had laughed while being named “Irishman of the Year” at the Coney Island Irish Fest, and there are Bronxites like Ann McGovern, who bragged of a recent hole-in-one on the golf course.
A vice-president at the Aon Corporation of Tower Two who had recently become a grandma for the fifth time, McGovern had many accomplishments and perhaps even more loved ones who gathered to mourn at St. Brigid's of Westbury, Long Island.
From the altar, Ann's husband summed up perhaps the most important lesson learned by untold thousands since the attacks of September 11.
"Don't be afraid to tell people you love them, when it could be the last words spoken," said Larry McGovern, near a poster-sized photo of Ann with her youngest grandchild, Liam.
Cocking his head to the church roof, McGovern said in a cracked voice: "I love you."
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.warlocks | Sep 13, 2011, 01:52 AM EDT
Yes we Irish American lost Many Lives on 9/11/01 But so Did the Italian, Americans & African Americans ,Latino's, Spanish , Germans, Polish, Catholics , Jews, and yes Muslims also we were ALL AMERICANS and we are all united.together we Stand !!!! and God Damn those who Raise up in Arms Aginst America.
HBDuncan | Nov 12, 2010, 05:20 AM EST
OMG Just checking this out late in November only to find I missed the fight! LOL Well, the Lord loves the lot of ya anyway. We must remember that the good Lord would want us to forgive! The enemy comes to rob, kill, steal and destroy! Now, who do you think the REAL enemy is? God brought the Irish to America because he knew we needed Ya! God Love Ya and Let us Remember All those who lost their lives in not only 9/11 but Ireland as well due to the evils of terrorism. We must not blame one another, but rather forgive and move on to preserve our liberty, freedom and the pursuit of happiness. We must not give in to what the terrorists would like to achieve - to divide and conquer! Semper Fi
maloney | Sep 13, 2010, 07:37 PM EDT
Ulster...your welcome as all are. Everybody loves a good joke.
Ulster1 | Sep 13, 2010, 02:30 PM EDT
To manhatten: Since I was born and raised in Ireland, I would think that I have a right to be on this website. It's called "Irish Central" -- not "American Central". It's ignorant people like you who don't, as you assert, "belong".
manhattan | Sep 13, 2010, 10:51 AM EDT
Again may I remind all you anti americans that this site is in RESPECT to all who died on 9\11. Whatever your problem with us, this is one place you do not belong on.
manhattan | Sep 13, 2010, 09:39 AM EDT
Oh Warrenpoint ,as a proud American, the thing I would get on my knees for is to thank God my Irish grandparents immigrated to this wonderful country and if we are so bad, why are so many trying to come here especially the Irish. Hmmmm.
killowen | Sep 13, 2010, 04:09 AM EDT
Importance of an ireland Try URL by using angelfire.com slash ny/border slash symbols.html
maloney | Sep 12, 2010, 10:13 PM EDT
America will mourn this weekend, we will get back to sending money to southern Ireland on Monday. MaryM... you are a patriot & may God bless you. America for the Americans..Ireland for the Irish!!
warrenpoint00 | Sep 12, 2010, 06:51 PM EDT
You should be on your knees asking for forgivness Manhattan FOR ALL the atrocities inflicted by the many not just one bombs delivered to the innocent in Iraq, Afghan ,Hiroshima, Nagasaki etc, etc.Point being ... leave us alone we will leave you alone.It is a simple proposition that applies to every country in the world.But then Manhattan you do believe America is the world.The Dublin/Monaghan bomb was initatied in London with the help of the British Littlejohn brothers and accessories of the terrorist wing of the British government. STATE SPONSORED.
Ulster1 | Sep 12, 2010, 04:28 PM EDT
The point is that the Dublin/Monaghan bombings in 1974 were carried out by Northern Irish people in their own country (in this case the UVF. "Irish" Americans' money funded the RIRA and CIRA in the Omagh bombing, and their money CONTINUES to fund terrorist that kill INNOCENT people in Northern Ireland to this day. Much of this money comes from these so-called Irish-Americans--who have never been to Ireland and probably never will--they are FOREIGNERS who should not interfere with a country they do not truly understand or know.
manhattan | Sep 12, 2010, 04:17 PM EDT
Warrenpoint and Ulster, this is supposed to be a tribute to all who died on 9/11. Take your Northern Irish problems somewhere else and stay the heck out of ours. You haven't been able to live together for 300 years and for the next 1000 yrs, it will be the same. Lord, no wonder you all hate each other.
warrenpoint00 | Sep 12, 2010, 03:09 PM EDT
I think Americans in general not alone Irish Americans should now realize the horrors of supporting terror atrocities on the people of Afgan and Iraq and the refusal by the U.S administrations in the past to speak out about British terrorists and British state sponsored terrorism and the terror they unleashed on the people of Ireland. Dublin/Monaghan bombing of 35 innocent people, Bloody Sunday Derry,Mc Gurks bar in Belfast, 11 year old Majella o Hare in Co Armagh murdered by british while going to church. etc etc and this is only the tip of the iceberg during years of occupied terrorism in Ireland
lostgold | Sep 12, 2010, 01:31 PM EDT
The poigniant and heartbreaking statement of fireman Mike Moran to Osama Ben Laden "Kiss my royal Irish ass" concerning the death of his brother is one we can all understand and his statements about Irish culture before that is one we can concur also. However despite the fury of Mikes language Islam has improved its position in Ireland. Now having 4 Mosques, more Islamic immigrants, more financial investments more children etc and what do Irish people in the U.S.do for this "Irish culture"Go to Irish bars and watch a St.Patricks day parade once a year.
Ulster1 | Sep 12, 2010, 01:28 PM EDT
In spite of 9/11, many Irish New Yorkers is still support terrorism. "Irish" Americans fund the Real IRA and the Continuity IRA. I know, the doctor's office at the end of my grand-parents street was bombed. Many innocent people in Afganistan have been "accidentaly" killed by U.S military weapons. I express my condolences to all families of terrorism.
Ulster1 | Sep 12, 2010, 12:58 PM EDT
As Americans remember the terrorism of 9/11, they should also consider how the terrorism of IRA bombs killed innocent people--both Protestant and Roman Catholic. How much of the money to buy the bombs was given by Irish-Americans over the past forty years. Think of the 1998 bombing in the town of Omagh, Co. Tyrone. Your money paid for it. What goes around comes around,as they say.
manhattan | Sep 12, 2010, 11:26 AM EDT
merica. So, no wonder we want to take those blowhards who make so much noise and shut them up. Hopefully Mary good people like Dublinjas,Odonnabain will continue to speak louder then the Dennis Q's,LondonIrish etc.
munster75 | Sep 11, 2010, 03:30 PM EDT
Firstly God bless the families of all the people who died on that dreadful day. I for one will never forget them may they rest in peace. MaryM232 I find your vision of Ireland the country I love as very offensive. We are not perfect we have done things wrong and other s have done wrong to us. We as a country have moved on I am not sure you have. I would never speak in such terms of the USA a country that is also not perfect but I hold in the highest respect for what it has done for my people. Respect is what we all need to find for others religions, way of life & beliefs. God Bless America & God Bless Ireland
londonirish1965 | Sep 11, 2010, 01:03 PM EDT
MaryM232- Ireland is actually less corrupt than America according to Transparency International.As for socialism-Ireland has a free market type economy,you must be confusing us with Northern Ireland. https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=t8HR9iGR5s9Y6bZpxEZMx1A#gid=0
Dublinjas | Sep 11, 2010, 03:26 AM EDT
It's just incredible when you see those numbers laid out, So many people who left their homes that morning never to return forever, The cream of society, The good and the decent, The life savers like the Firemen and Police Officers, Cut down in their prime, It's just too painful.
ODonnabhain | Sep 11, 2010, 01:40 AM EDT
Sitting here with tears in my eyes for them all. Today there will be prayers going out for the repose of their souls and for their families. God Bless!
plasticpaddy | Sep 10, 2010, 05:24 PM EDT
MaryM232 "They recognized the corruption of their former country, and raised their children, and taught their grandchildren the same". Really really silly comment.
maryemoore | Sep 10, 2010, 03:22 PM EDT
Don't forget Fr. Mychal Judge. And my dear friend Debbie Judge Welch, another Irish American who was the head flight attendant on Flight 93. She will always stay in our hearts.
manhattan | Sep 10, 2010, 03:06 PM EDT
What a beautiful tribute to those who gave there lives that day. If you were a New Yorker Irish born or of Irish descent you were related or knew a Fireman, Policeman, Port of Authority Police and those who chose white collar jobs. It was so close to us for instance I had a boyfriend named Paddy Driscoll. That was 50 yrs. ago and I never him again. We all left the neighborhoods for the suburbs in the 60's and 70's. And our kids went back to the city to join just like those before them. the Fire Dept, Police etc. A week after 9/11 there were pictures posted of the Port Authority Police that died. One face stood out, his name was Steven Driscoll and I found out he was indeed Paddys son. "THOSE OF YOU WHO THINK OF THEM TODAY, A LITTLE PRAYER TO JESUS SAY.
jtorpeysmith | Sep 10, 2010, 02:56 PM EDT
Responding to pemrray: On 9/11/01, my son was in the Camden County NJ police academy. Sometime in November, I happened on to a website that sold bracelets, just like the Vietnam-era POW/MIA bracelets, with the names of those killed on 9/11. I ordered one for my son as a graduation present. I was told that it probably wouldn't arrive by Christmas, but that wasn't an issue for me. I just wanted to give him one, whenever it came. I don't know how they picked the name on the bracelet he received. All I asked for was that it be that of an NYPD office., and it was Moira Smith's name on the bracelet they sent to me (as you can see, our name is Smith). And the bracelet arrived on December 18, the day that he graduated from the police academy. Moira's body hadn't been found yet up to that time. I'm getting goosebumps as I write this--my son called one day to say "Mom, they just found Moira's body". I don't remember the date, but Moira Smith's body was one of the last to be found at the Twin Towers site. My son, who is a Camden County (NJ) Sheriff's Officer, wears his bracelet with her name on it at all times.
MaryM232 | Sep 10, 2010, 02:16 PM EDT
KatieMac, Speaking out against those who seek to exploit something precious doesn't mean one's cage is rattled, furthermore, US citizens who respect the US constitution don't live in a cage. The constitution is doing fine, and it will continue to, as long as we reject the corruption of those who wish to do to us, what the Irish have done to themselves. My grandparents felt love for their former country, but they loved America first and foremost. Their allegiance was to the US constitution, they identified as Americans, not as "Irish", they never hyphenated. They recognized the corruption of their former country, and raised their children, and taught their grandchildren the same.
McNamara31 | Sep 10, 2010, 01:18 PM EDT
Anyone who lives near "the towers," remembers it was a beautiful day, like today. We left for work, and then the first plane, the second, the third....Shock, horror, and dread for anyone with family in the city that day. No phones working, just the TV. But most of all, for the families of any of the reponders...Police, Fire, EMTs...That day, we were Americans first. No division, no politics, no religions; just people in need, helping and laying down their lives for strangers. God Bless All who were touched by 911. May you find peace one day.
yorkville | Sep 10, 2010, 12:32 PM EDT
Who rattled your cage MaryM232?
MaryM232 | Sep 10, 2010, 12:03 PM EDT
To anyone who bemoans erosions of the US constitution, the facts are this, those who demand that US citizens have their rights cheapened and eroded by amnesty for illegals, are facilitators of erosion of the US constitution. Ireland has no claim on America, or American citizens who happen to have Irish ancestry. Just as Ireland can't continue to blame it's corruption on England. Irish elected Irish politicians have fiddled with, and sold them out, and the Irish people need to wake up to the fact that they share culpability in their country's failures and debt. As someone whose grandparents were Irish emigres, and became US citizens, I say that the quality and character of Ireland's people has declined, they are soft, greedy and irresponsible. They live feckless lives, they grasp out demanding others subsidize their corruption. I'm offended by Irish Central's inference that the heroism and bravery of our first responders, and those heroes on the flights can be credited to Ireland, in all candor, those who might have had Irish ancestry, weren't formed by the corrupt pit that is Ireland, but by the culture of the United States of America, a land where one takes personal responsibility, where one doesn't stew in pathetic hatreds and bigotry, as Ireland does. You can't drag your sad selves up, by riding on our coat tails any longer. Take your plantation slavery mindset and stuff it. You won't be allowed to drag our country down with your cheap claims to relevance. The response to 9/11 was an American response. I can't help but wonder at what the response would have been were this to have happened in Ireland, it certainly wouldn't have been as brave and inspiring, and we all know that Ireland would have had it's begging bowl out, drunk on self pity.
Hummingbird | Sep 10, 2010, 11:04 AM EDT
The cries throughout the Irish neighborhoods could be heard from house to house. Yes, we need to remember these brave souls and all who lost their lives on that terrible day.
CitizenWhy | Sep 10, 2010, 10:51 AM EDT
May they rest in peace. May their loved ones find comfort in each other and the courage to live on. Pray for the children who witnessed and are haunted by this crime. ... The best way for America to remember these dead is to live up to its ideals, working to make life better for all its citizens and inspiring, through example, people everywhere to live with respect for life and humanity.
HoundofUlster | Sep 10, 2010, 10:47 AM EDT
Sad day for freedom as it set the stage for an erosion of the US Constitution.
kerrigan | Sep 10, 2010, 10:43 AM EDT
Thank you so much for reprinting this. It is still almost too painful to read, but it is the least we can do. God bless the Irish
Dandyglow | Sep 10, 2010, 10:17 AM EDT
Even now, the pain lingers and the memories of those who perished will as well.
RosemaryKelly | Sep 10, 2010, 10:02 AM EDT
This article is a wonderful tribute to all of those who lost their lives on 9-11. Thanks.
pemrray | Sep 10, 2010, 09:41 AM EDT
I am a retired NYCTPD Officer, I trained rookies periodically during my 20 years. I told the kids take a lesson from me a lesson from the next training officer etc etc - If EVER you get a call of help from a brother/sister officer...get there now matter how, years ago taxi's were the best (Commandeir one) anyway A officer takind a deposition at the 13Pct (some distance away from WTC) responded that day. She was seen on the pages of various newspapers guiding a bleeding gentleman from the towers, she went back in...Moira Smith (Lynch) was the only female member of the PD to perish that day
ksmith625 | Sep 10, 2010, 09:22 AM EDT
don't read this at work; you will need a full box of tissues