Shoes that were worn by Gerry Bogacs, when he left the World Trade Tower on September 11.
Gerry Bogacz a World Trade Center Survivor.
Views of the footprints of the original World Trade Towers, soon to be the Memorial Pools. Looking south from Tower Number 7 to the southern tip of Manhattan and the Statue of Liberty. The building under construction on the left is Tower 4 and the partial building on the right under construction is the Freedom Tower, or Tower 1
The first sixteen swamp white oak trees being planted at the 9/11 Memorial Site.
Firefighter Mathew Komorowski who was with his men in Tower 1 when it collapsed. They had stopped to help a woman on the fifth floor and somehow were saved in a pocket of the building that didn't crush them. They were trapped for about 4 to 5 hours before being rescued. His helmet flew off his head when the building collapsed, and a month later it was returned to him.
Firefighter Mathew Komorowski who was with his men in Tower 1 when it collapsed. They had stopped to help a woman on the fifth floor and somehow were saved in a pocket of the building that didn't crush them. They were trapped for about 4 to 5 hours before being rescued. His helmet flew off his head when the building collapsed, and a month later it was returned to him.
Looking west from Building 4 at Memorial Pool.  The white building to the right is the new memorial museum.  The tall building under construction is the Freedom Tower One WTC.
Six months after the fall of the Twin Towers, two beacons of blue light rise beyond Tribeca as a memorial to New York City's darkest, and bravest, hour. March 11, 2002.
Smoke bellows from where Flight 11 crashed into the North Tower of the World Trade Centre. It later fell at 10:28am.
Six months after the fall of the Twin Towers, two beacons of blue light rise beyond Tribeca as a memorial to New York City's darkest, and bravest, hour. March 11, 2002.
Six months after the fall of the Twin Towers, two beacons of blue light rise beyond Tribeca as a memorial to New York City's darkest, and bravest, hour. March 11, 2002.
Six months after the fall of the Twin Towers, two beacons of blue light rise beyond Tribeca as a memorial to New York City's darkest, and bravest, hour. March 11, 2002.
See photo in original gallery.