Luke Davis watched the WTC fall from his home in Astoria, Queens. He calls in March 2002 to express his admiration of the Tribute in Light memorial that was visible at night.
New Jersey resident Nancy Boss always used to look at the New York skyline when she was driving on Route 22--she still does. She never realized before what the WTC meant to her.
Laura Weinberg Arnow's husband always worked either by the WTC or in it. In the 1960s, his office had a view of the slurry wall being built; then he worked for the Port Authority. Arnow also describes going with her son to meet her husband at the…
Jonathan Siskin was evacuated from his apartment in Battery Park City on 9/11 and had to run into a restaurant to escape the dust. He saved the voicemails he received that day.
Katherine Johnson saved the message she received on 9/11 from her father in Wisconsin. He was crying--something she had never heard before--and checking maps to see how far away she was from the WTC.
Californian Monica Morrill visited the WTC only once, in 1994. She remembers thinking that the people there were very New York and feeling that she was looking like a tourist.
Colorado resident Barbara Dunn used to live in Jersey City. She spent so much time in the subway tunnels under the WTC that the sounds of rush hour there are still vivid to her.
New York native Jan Polatschek, now living in Miami, used to commute over Manhattan Bridge from Brooklyn. Polatscheck remembers the construction of the towers, especially the cranes that rose more than 110 stories.
Bob Windbiel talks about his musician friend, Ray Ack, who played in the plaza during a sound check in 1997. Ray talked about hearing the sound bounce back and forth, from building to building, straight up to heaven.
Brian Smith, now living in Texas, recalls working in 1 WTC. On weekends, when it was quiet, the sound of the tower creaking reminded him of a sailing ship in the wind.
Cheryl Myers from Wisconsin describes the message she received from her supervisor, who was in NYC on September 11--it made an event that was so far away seem real.