USA Today Nominates 9/11 Memorial Museum as Best Patriotic Landmark

USA Today Nominates 9/11 Memorial Museum as Best Patriotic Landmark

A woman in a stars and stripes tophat puts her arms on a bronze parapet at the Memorial as she looks out over a reflecting pool. Other visitors are gathered behind her.
Visitors at the North Pool of the 9/11 Memorial. Photo by Jin Lee.

The 9/11 Memorial and Museum has been listed as a destination that embodies a spirit of patriotism in USA Today’s 10Best Readers’ Choice 2016 poll.

USA Today “is out to find America's best patriotic attractions – sites that help us remember our past and ignite our national pride.”

Editors selected 20 locations across the United States as nominees. To support the 9/11 Memorial Museum, you can vote once per day until Monday, June 20.

It’s not the first time the 9/11 Memorial and Museum was selected as a top destination. Last year, the 9/11 Memorial and Museum was voted in TripAdvisor's top five national landmarks. The Memorial also ranked in the top 20 international landmarks for Travelers’ Choice in 2015.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

9/11 Museum Program Highlights Stories Behind FEMA Photographs

9/11 Museum Program Highlights Stories Behind FEMA Photographs

FEMA photographer Andrea Booher smiles onstage as she speaks with a woman out of focus in the foreground.
FEMA photographer Andrea Booher and Amy Weisser at the 9/11 Memorial Museum auditorium. Photo by Ben Hider.

Rescue and recovery workers, many returning to ground zero for the first time since the 9/11 recovery efforts ended, filled the 9/11 Memorial Museum auditorium Wednesday night for a public program highlighting a new exhibition. Photographer Andrea Booher was the featured guest for the program, and recounted stories behind her photographs in the exhibition “Hope at Ground Zero: FEMA Photographs by Andrea Booher.”

“There was a bond of shared experience that was very intense. It’s a family,” said Booher of the relationships she formed while at ground zero. She was diligent about keeping track of those she photographed, writing their names and contact information in a green notebook that she carried with her on the site.

Amy Weisser, 9/11 Memorial Senior Vice President of Exhibitions and co-curator of the show moderated the program. She asked Booher to recount stories behind some of the photographs featured in the exhibition.  Booher described each scene, often linking the story of a photograph to individuals who were in the audience.

When she got to a large scale landscape photo of the site taken the day the operation shifted from a rescue effort to a recovery, she became emotional.

“There was a shift of energy on that day. It was clear that we were not going to bring anyone out alive,” she said.  

“Hope at Ground Zero: FEMA Photographs by Andrea Booher” is now on view in the museum. Learn more about the exhibition and explore some of the photographs.  

Listen to Booher describe her photographs in the video below.

 

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

Subscribe to