Jackie Herships, mother of artist Sally Herships, talks about her daughter's projects, Manhattan 9/11/01 and 366 Stories, which document the turn of the millennium in New York City.
Jan Bienhof, who worked from Minnesota as a mail service manager for the 90th to 97th floors of 1 WTC, talks about how the WTC server stopped responding at 12:47 GMT (or 8:47 a.m. EST). She also remarks on the way Peter Jennings lapses into a…
Bob Barkerher is a former WTC executive who later became a tour guide at the towers. He explains that the tops of the towers sway 11 feet on windy days and says that the people working above the 75th floor sometimes got seasick.
Washington State resident Susan Small was a graduate student in NYC in the 1970s. She remembers that the WTC was totally empty by 10:00 at night. She can still recall the sound of her leather sandals against the marble floors of the WTC atrium.
An Iowa woman who visited her sister in NYC in the 1980s remembers looking up at the WTC observation deck from below. She saw what she thought was a bird in the sky, but it turned out to be a 747. Later, standing on the top of the building, she flew…
Deb Green remembers people looking at her unshaven legs while she was standing on the observation deck. She reads the haiku she wrote about the experience.
Gary Stephan talks about the barges that are being filled with the debris from the WTC. When the material hits the barges, there's a droning noise, a kind of drum roll.
Katie George visited New York from New Mexico years ago. She remembers the sound of the flushing toilet at the WTC--it was a unique noise, high-powered and industrial.
Kate Tour is afraid of heights. When saw a picture of two people holding hands and jumping off the tower on 9/11, she thought they must be the bravest people in the world.
Virginian Jennifer Kronstein remembers hearing random reports of a plane flying into the WTC on the morning of 9/11 and wondering what kind of idiot would do that. Then the news became clearer. Her dad was supposed to meet with the Port Authority…
Ian Hochberg, who lives in Maryland, visited the WTC in the 1970s and remembers the silence on the observation deck. He visited Ground Zero in October and was again struck by the silence amid the destruction.
On September 10, 2001, Nashville songwriter Joe Nolan wrote Blue Turns Black, a song so serious that he wondered where the emotions had come from. The next day, the composition suddenly made more sense.