photo by Alice Lum |
In October 2000 Matthews International Corporation of
Pittsburgh received the commission to create the bronze statue. Cast in the firm’s Parma, Italy foundry, the
2,700-pound sculpture was completed nearly a year later, in August 2001. Matthews International had promised the
Missouri firefighters that the statue would be delivered in October. Although the bronze was originally intended
to be shipped by ocean, Matthews decided to air freight it through New York
City to guarantee the delivery deadline.
The statue never made it to Missouri.
The crate arrived at Kennedy Airport on September 9, 2001 where it was held for customs clearance. Two
days later Al-Qaeda-affiliated terrorists flew two Boeing 767 airliners into
the World Trade Towers. Emergency responders
rushed to the scene in a valiant attempt to save the thousands of workers in
the burning structures. Among the 2,573
innocent people who were murdered that day, 343 were New York City
firefighters.
The entire nation joined New Yorkers in their shock and
grief; among them the firefighters of Missouri and the Matthews International
Corporation employees. The Fire Fighters
Memorial Foundation joined with Dave DeCarlo of Matthews International and
offered the statue—which so astonishingly-well reflected the pathos of the
event--to the New York City Fire Department and the Federal Law Enforcement
Foundation as a gift to New York.
On September 17, the day that the Kneeling Fireman was
released from Kennedy Airport, the New York Post published a full-page
photograph of a New York City firefighter kneeling in the ashes of the Trade
Towers. Eerily, the photograph was nearly
identical to the bronze sculpture.
Earlier that week the Matthews International Corporation
produced two bronze plaques in its Pittsburgh plant to accompany the
statue. One, the “Emergency Services”
plaque includes bas relief images of first responders—policemen, firemen and
emergency services personnel—performing their heroic jobs. The second, “America the Beautiful,” depicts
through scenes of the Liberty
Bell, Mount Rushmore and the Golden Gate Bridge the country which the terrorists sought to destroy .
The Kneeling Fireman was temporarily displayed in front of
the Milford Plaza Hotel in Midtown. The
Milstein family, owners of the hotel and the Emigrant Savings Bank, donated a
granite base for the sculpture. The
statue became a makeshift memorial as thousands of New Yorkers and tourists
left candles, photographs of lost loved ones, prayer books, flowers and notes.
The Kneeling Fireman was temporarily displayed outside the Milford Plaza Hotel in the weeks after 9/11. New Yorkers and tourists alike left written prayers, candles and flowers at the makeshift memorial. -- photo Matthews International Corporation http://www.matthewsbronze.com/aboutus/NotableProjects/AboutUsNotableNYCFirefighter.htm |
Notable members of Federal law enforcement joined FDNY dignitaries
and others as Howard P. Milstein, Emigrant Bank Chairman and CEO led the
dedication of the statue at the 43rd Street headquarters of the
bank. The statue, 9 feet tall and 12
feet long, became the only memorial to 9/11 in Midtown Manhattan.
The Fire Fighters Association of Missouri said on its
website “It was the feeling of the Fire Fighters Memorial Foundation of
Missouri Board that it would be an honor to have our statue in New York City
as a tribute to all those who served so well.
Passersby are moved to tears and many visitors return to add flowers and
candles around the statue daily.”
Few who pause before the poignant sculpture could imagine
that its presence in New York City as a memorial to those killed on 9/11 is the
result of unfathomable coincidence.
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