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After the September 11 terrorist attacks, the Kingsley Field Airport, Oregon, fire department holds a fundraiser for the families of the firemen killed in the World Trade Center collapse

Two Washington, District of Columbia (DC) area firefighters stand in a debris-littered parking area and watch heavy smoke and flames rise out of the severely damaged Western Wing of the Pentagon. Terrorists caused this damage after they hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 and flew it into the Pentagon on September 11, 2001

Wallkill Middle School Seventh graders load up a truck with food boxes they made up and donated to 105th Airlift Wing members who are returning from guard duty in New York City after the World Trade Center collapse. The collapse due to terrorist flying two large passenger aircraft into the buildings; killing all in the planes and thousands in the building

Volunteers and fire personnel carry litters to remove survivors and causalities from the collapsed section of the Pentagon. Smoke floats from the impact site where a suspected terrorist crashed of a hijacked commercial airliner into the building

Holding a mass meeting in the Dining Facility at Stewart Air National Guard Base in Newburgh, New York, MASTER Sergeant Dave Baird, 105th Air Wing, briefs on pay information to personnel on the 105th Airlift Wings third rotation deployment to World Trade Center (WTC) site areas. New York Air National Guard personnel assisted in relief efforts at the collapse site as part of Operation NOBLE EAGLE. The collapse due to terrorist flying two large passenger aircraft into the buildings; killing all in the planes and thousands in the building. In response, President George W. Bush initiated NOBLE EAGLE a partial mobilization of the reserves for homeland defense and civil support missions in ...

Twisted wreckage and debris litter the grounds of the Pentagon following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attack. The morning before, in an attempt to frighten the American people, five members of Al-Qaida, a terrorist group of fundamentalist Muslims, hijacked American Airlines Flight 77, then flew a circuitous route returning to Washington and impacting the Pentagon killing all 64 passengers onboard and 125 people on the ground. The impact destroyed or damaged four of the five rings in that section of the building. Firefighters fought the fire through the night

Two airmen help a firefighter to his feet after the man assisted in extinguishing the blaze aboard an Alaska Air National Guard KC-135E Stratotanker aircraft, background, that exploded and burned while taxiing to a parking area. Two of the aircraft's seven crewmen were killed; the others sustained only minor injuries

An aerial view showing the level of the destruction at the Pentagon caused by a terrorist attack. The morning of September 11th, in an attempt to frighten the American people, five members of Al-Qaida, a terrorist group of fundamentalist Muslims, hijacked American Airlines Flight 77, then deliberately impacted the Pentagon killing all 64 passengers onboard and 125 people on the ground. The impact destroyed or damaged four of the five rings in that section of the building. Firefighters fought the fire through the night. The Pentagon was the third target by four hijacked aircraft, the twin towers of the World Trade Center (WTC) were the other targets, and one unknown when the passengers...

Firefighters struggle to contain the fire, after the September 11, 2001, terrorist attack on the Pentagon. Members of Al-Qaeda, a terrorist group of fundamentalist Muslims, hijacked American Airlines Flight 77, then deliberately impacted the Pentagon, killing all 64 passengers onboard and 125 people on the ground. (U.S. Navy photo by Photographer's Mate First Class Dewitt D. Roseborough III.) (Released)

A Kingsley Field Airport fireman watches as donations as dropped into a firemans boot. The donations are for the families of the firemen killed in the World Trade Center collapse on September 11, 2001. The collapse due to terrorist flying two large passenger aircraft into the buildings; killing all in the planes and thousands in the building

description

Summary

The original finding aid described this photograph as:

Base: Kingsley Field

State: Oregon (OR)

Country: United States Of America (USA)

Scene Major Command Shown: ANG

Scene Camera Operator: SRA Jennifer Boe, USAF

Release Status: Released to Public

Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files

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kingsley field airport fireman kingsley field airport fireman watches donations boot firemans boot families collapse world trade center collapse passenger aircraft passenger aircraft buildings planes thousands world trade center person us air force high resolution state kingsley field scene major command sra jennifer boe us national archives
date_range

Date

27/09/2001
place

Location

create

Source

The U.S. National Archives
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Link

https://catalog.archives.gov/
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Copyright info

No known copyright restrictions

label_outline Explore Sra Jennifer Boe, World Trade Center Collapse, Thousands

Ånglok, Lokeldare i arbete. Sverige

US Air Force (USAF) SENIOR AIRMAN (SRA) Sayward Pierce, Passenger Service Agent, 723 Air Mobility Squadron (AMS), Ramstein Air Base (AB), Germany, works the customer service counter at the Air Mobility Command (AMC) passenger terminal. (Duplicate image, see also DFSD0412472 or search 021211F1851U004)

US Navy Machinery Repairman Fireman Timothy Bowden (left) shows a trainee how to use blade sharpening tools in the machinery shop onboard the Nimitz Class Aircraft Carrier USS JOHN C. STENNIS (CVN 74) in the Pacific Ocean. The STENNIS and embarked Carrier Air Wing 9 are operating together for the first time during a Composite Training Unit Exercise.(U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication SPECIALIST 2nd Class Heidi Giacalone) (Released)

Kingsley Field Firefighters reset the center cable

Onboard the US Navy (USN) Aircraft Carrier, USS KITTY HAWK (CV 63), Damage Controlman Fireman (DCFN) Heath Neal, uses the 1MC (general announcing system) to notify the crew of damage control efforts around the ship from Damage Control Central (DCC), during a fire fighting drill. Sailors train to defend the ship and control battle damage during such drills. The KITTY HAWK is currently in port at Yokosuka, Japan

Second Lieutenant Kimberly Cardona-Smith, USAF, Commander of the 105th Communications Squadron and the 105th recruiting staff visits the Wallkill Middle School. The students assembled and donated dry goods food boxes for the workers at Ground Zero, the World Trade Center collapse in New York City. The collapse due to terrorist flying two large passenger aircraft into the buildings; killing all in the planes and thousands in the building. Standing in the background is Mrs. Lori Hughes, Home and Careers Skills Department teacher

USS FRANK CABLE, At Sea – Hull Maintenance Technician

Cape Canaveral, Fla. – At Fire Station 1 at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Fire and Rescue personnel pause for a moment of silence during a ceremony commemorating the 13th anniversary of 9/11 at 10:28 a.m., which was the moment of collapse of the north tower of the World Trade Center. Photo credit: Jim Grossmann KSC-2014-3803

SASEBO, Japan (May 5, 2016) - Sailors assigned to amphibious

190221-N-YG414-002 EAST CHINA SEA (Feb. 21, 2019) -

173rd Fighter Wing Firefighter Kevin Hamilton stands

U.S Air Force Staff. Sgt. Alejandra Cepeda, a fire

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kingsley field airport fireman kingsley field airport fireman watches donations boot firemans boot families collapse world trade center collapse passenger aircraft passenger aircraft buildings planes thousands world trade center person us air force high resolution state kingsley field scene major command sra jennifer boe us national archives