Californian Greg Mix reads his family's annual Christmas letter. This year, inspired by the Sonic Memorial, the letter was about the WTC buildings. He talks about the construction of the buildings, the view, Windows on the World, and how the place…
Page West tells of eloping in New York in 1999 and going to Windows on the World after the ceremony. She also describes how she was in the PATH station the night before 9/11 and saw the whole event the next morning.
Frank Carbone recalls a phone message he received from a man living near the Lexington Avenue armory, who described how the families of the victims were gathering there.
Dr. Elizabeth Grill's husband had always wanted to propose to her on top of the world--so he chose Windows on the World for the event. The couple were on their honeymoon on September 11.
Watching the news on 9/11, Will Nichols saw footage of the tower falling that was shot by physician Mark Heath. Will e-mailed the doctor, hoping to hear that he had been able to help some of the victims, and Dr. Heath answered. Unfortunately, there…
Karim, a downtown resident who worked until 2 a.m. in Tribeca, recalls riding his bike home and stopping along the way at the WTC plaza. He would lie there and look up at the towers.
Roddy Hatala talks about taking visiting foreign scholars up to the WTC observation deck. He remembers being surprised that the lights are never shut off--and the time an 83-year-old woman said that looking straight down was almost like having sex.
Janice Silversteen, a coin collector, went to the observation deck to use the penny pressing machine, which makes an elongated penny with the WTC on it.
Sena Omotunde has been living in the United States for 15 years, but it wasn't until after 9/11 that she felt a powerful draw to become an American citizen.
Deborah Calandrillo lost her husband, Joseph, in the WTC attacks. On September 11th, she belatedly checked her email and recieved his last e-mail sent Friday before the attack. What, no more love and kisses? he wrote jokingly.
Marianne Engles came to Ground Zero after 9/11 with a San Diego disaster team. She found the sounds of the heavy equipment, the wrecking balls, very oppressive and vivid.
Adrianna Bravo, a young doctor at St. Vincent's Hospital, reads her journal entries from 9/11. She felt so unprepared for her first look at war and describes treating firemen and policemen.
Oregonian Stan Strange recalls being awakened by a dog wailing on 9/11, something he has never heard before or since. He immediately knew something had happened.