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World Trade Center Memorial Breakfast
TOn November 21, 2002, the New York Building Foundation hosted
a World Trade Center Memorial Breakfast and presented crystal memorial
plaques to the 26 design and construction organizations that lost
employees or members on September 11, 2001.
A total of 166 men and women employed in the building trades, engineering,
architecture and other building disciplines were lost in the tragic
attack on America and New York City. The largest losses were sustained
by 17 unions, the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey and
Washington Group International.
The
Building Foundation designed and produced a separate crystal memorial
plaque for each of the companies, agencies and unions involved.
Each memorial was inscribed with the names of the employees/ members
who perished from that organization. The memorials, displayed prior
to the breakfast, were officially presented to each organization
during the morning’s program. Family members, some of whom
were present at the event, were given printed replicas of the appropriate
memorial as a keepsake.
At the event, Richard T. Anderson, President of the New York Building
Foundation and the New York Building Congress, opened the program
by saying, “This industry has always been known for generosity
and civic involvement, but I have never seen it contribute so much
so willingly than in the aftermath of the attacks of September 11,
2001. The Building Foundation’s World Trade Center Memorial
Fund is truly a labor of love that is funneling not just money but
support for the larger building community from all sectors throughout
the Country and the world.”
John
F. Hennessy III, Chairman of the New York Building Foundation, introduced
each of the organizations that received memorials saying, “These
unions, companies and agencies experienced very personal losses
on September 11 that have changed them forever. In many ways it
has made them, and all of us in the industry, more determined to
do whatever we can to help the City not only recover but grow in
prominence and strength. The losses our colleagues have suffered
have served to unify our industry and spur us all to greater accomplishments
than we could have imagined prior to the tragedy.”
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