| Introduction to the Collection | Collection
Documents and Artifacts |
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Introduction
to the Collection |
On September 11, 2001, terrorists attacked the United
States by hijacking planes and crashing them into the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon. A fourth plane was hijacked, but its passengers
revolted before it crashed in Pennsylvania and reached its target.
Many Long Island residents worked in the World Trade
Center's Twin Towers and the surrounding area known as the Financial
District. Some of the New York City firefighters and New York City
police officers who rushed to the scene were from Long Island. After
the tragedy, the Long Island residents who worked as firefighters,
police officers, and MTA and construction workers went back to downtown
Manhattan day after day to sift through the rubble. The personal accounts
of some of these workers are a unique part of our collection.

Rescue Workers at the World Trade
Center site.
Individuals, members of trade unions, and government
agencies as well as health care workers from Long Island rushed to
the aid of the wounded city. This collection records their actions
with documents, photos, and personal accounts.
Recovery workers from the suburbs would return home
every night only to return to the city in the morning to continue
cleaning up the aftermath. Businesses on the Island donated money
and supplies to the relief effort and to charities that helped the
victims' families. This collection holds documentation of the
efforts of these rescue and recovery workers, and of businesses. However,
it was not only the rescue and recovery workers who dedicated themselves
to helping New York City, elementary school students held fundraisers
for the relief funds and sent cards and letters of encouragement to
the workers in lower Manhattan. Their stories can be found in this
collection as well.
All over Long Island memorial services were held for
those whose lives were lost on September 11. Lists of the missing and lost
are included in the collection along with highlighted names of Long Island residents. Religious institutions worked overtime to plan funerals
and to provide counseling and community outreach to all of the people
who experienced different degrees of sadness, fear, and confusion.
The community services of religious institutions are documented herein
as well.
| Similarly, parents and teachers helped children to understand
what had happened. Methods of consolation used by the adults and
the words and images of the children of Long Island are included
in this collection. Even the entertainment industry was touched
by these events, as is evident in the contents of the sports folders
and the newspaper comic pages in the days, weeks, and months after
September 11. |
Students and a teacher placing ribbons on trees
at Harold D. Fayette Elementary School in North Merrick, UFSD
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Letter written and addressed to G-d asking for peace
for our nation.
The correspondence and published writings included in
the September 11th Project Collection reflect the thoughts of Long
Island residents as they contemplated the terrorist attacks on the
United States and the subsequent war on terrorism.
Nonprofit organizations such as libraries, museums,
and historical societies attempted to collect and disseminate information.
They were instrumental in putting events in context for people who
sought and continue to seek a better understanding of how the nation
and world changed as a result of the attacks.
In local, regional, and national publications, journalists
tried to keep up with a world that had been changed in an instant
and has continued to change. Visual artists, poets and photographers
tried to capture the many experiences and emotions that ran through
the people of Long Island, New York, and the nation.
Digital Art by Susan Oakes
(SuOakes Graphic Design)
"September 11, 2001: No Time to Scream" |
Digital Art by Susan Oakes
(SuOakes Graphic Design)
"September 11, 2001: Untimely Death" |
The collection includes artifacts such as hard hats,
gloves, respirators, boots, a pickax, and a hoe used by Long Island
residents who worked in the recovery effort on the 11th and in the
days and weeks following the attacks. Also included is one of the
banners that hung at the WTC site to encourage the rescue/recovery
workers, which is emblazoned with the word "TEAMWORK" and
a biblical quote.
The Long Island Studies Institute September 11th Project
Collection contains materials that show how the terrorist attack on
the World Trade Center affected the people of Long Island. Development
of the collection is ongoing and has been used by researchers since
its creation.
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Collection
Documents and Artifacts |
The September 11th Project Collection contains documents
and artifacts from the following areas or groups: