Robert Bauer's son, Nathan, worked on the 52nd floor of 1 WTC--luckily, he was stuck in the subway the morning of 9/11. Bauer's daughter, Emilia, was in her NYU dorm with a view of the WTC. In response to the attacks, Bauer, who lives in Maine,…
Lorraine Stone, who was visiting France when the attacks happened, describes the reaction of the people there. She also kept her phone messages from that day.
Karen Schneider describes her daily commute from New Jersey to the WTC, the din of the crowd, and how she once lost a button on her way and could hear it fall in spite of the noise.
Alison Murphy was on the way to work in Kentucky when she heard about the attacks. She grew up in NJ and had watched the buildings being built. Later her mom, who had a view of the WTC from her deck, called to describe what was happening.
Heather Ordover is a teacher at the High School for Leadership and Public Service one block south of the WTC. On 9/11, the students were evacuated to Castle Clinton; Ordover could hear ash falling into the river. Later, they learned that their…
In 1998 James Burton and his wife Ann were married in the Valentine's Day Wedding Marathon on the roof deck of the WTC. There were "55 couples [110 people] to match the 110 stories of the building."
Captain D. C. Anderson grew up on New York Harbor and has worked there since the WTC was built. In all the hundreds of times he has sailed around the tip of Manhattan, he has never tired of the view.
Eric Milano was a friend of firefighter Christopher Pickford, who was killed on 9/11. Milano made a tribute CD that includes songs he wrote for his friend and other memorial material.
Downtown resident Daniel Goode will never forget the roar of the first plane as it passed his apartment window on 9/11 or the sound of wrecking ball at Ground Zero.
An anonymous woman recommends two Channel 13 programs. "Souls of New York" included an interview with an observation deck guide, and "The Elevator" had a segment about a man who was trapped in the WTC elevator during the 1993 attack and escaped.