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Posted on Sun, Sep 11, 2011 : 5:44 p.m.

New Eastern Michigan University 9/11 memorial steel beam stirs emotions at unveiling

By Laura Blodgett

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A beam from the World Trade Center is installed just outside Pease Hall at Eastern Michigan University on Sunday afternoon in Ypsilanti. The beam is believed to be from the 74th floor of the South Tower.

Joseph Tobianski | AnnArbor.com

More than 200 people turned out on a sunny afternoon Sunday to reflect, express pride and mourn as Eastern Michigan University unveiled its 9/11 memorial 10 years after the fateful day.

The memorial features a 14-foot, 6,800-pound steel beam from the World Trade Center displayed on a concrete base in Pease Park, located at the corner of Perrin and Cross streets in the southeastern corner of EMU's campus.

Many who watched the unveiling said they came to pay their respects.

“It’s amazing, and I’m so glad we have something local here,” said Ypsilanti resident Randy Hall, who lives a few blocks away from the memorial. “It just brings all the feelings back.”

Speakers at the event, including U.S. Rep. John Dingell and Washtenaw County Sheriff Jerry Clayton, used the ceremony to reflect on the examples of heroism from the chaotic day and remember how Americans came together in its aftermath.

Dingell said he hopes the memorial serves as a reminder to Americans that they are many and diverse.

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Eastern Michigan University senior Erin Kennedy of Ypsilanti lays flowers on the World Trade Center beam after a 9/11 memorial event at Eastern Michigan University Sunday.

Joseph Tobianski | AnnArbor.com

“We must draw together and remain together as we did following the events of 9/11,” said Dingell, a Democrat and longtime member of Congress who encouraged similar camaraderie to help restore the economic well-being of the country.

The beam used in the memorial appears to be from the 74th floor of the South Tower, with the words “South” and “74” written on it from when the building was originally constructed.

“We are not certain, but [if so] it was very near to where the plane hit at the 78th floor,” said Geoff Larcom, executive director of Media Relations at EMU. If so, the beam had fallen roughly 900 feet that day.

The beam is thought to have been about 30 feet long in its original form, and likely to have been a primary structural beam from the center of the building.

The jagged edge at one end indicates where the beam tore apart.

“From the buckling and the way it was cut off at the end, temperatures had to be close to 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit,” said John Donegan, head of the EMU physical plant.

He pointed out markings on the beam where debris fell during the tower's destruction and was singed onto it; other markings are believed to be trails of jet fuel.

Donegan says they are trying to determine how to coat the beam to preserve the markings without losing its integrity.

Members of the EMU Department of Public Safety and Ypsilanti Fire Department saluted while a bagpiper circled the memorial playing "Amazing Grace."

There were some tears in the crowd as people lined up and slowly walked past the memorial, touching its grooves and stopping to take pictures. Someone laid flowers on one end of the beam.

Eastern Michigan acquired the artifact from the New York Port Authority earlier this summer as part of a program to distribute items from Ground Zero for memorials and other demonstrations. EMU was selected following a formal request from university President Susan Martin two years ago.

There were 2,000 requests submitted for 1,300 pieces of steel.

“It is an important part of our history and a lot of people — such as my grandchildren who were not even born yet — can learn from that and remember,” said Martin. “I think it is wonderful to have it at a public university.”

Although they can’t be sure, university officials believe this is one of the largest pieces of steel available of the artifacts, which ranged from pieces of the outer buildings to smaller sections of beams.

In early August, Donegan and coworker Kevin Abbasse drove in a flatbed truck to John F. Kennedy International Airport, where the items were being stored.

When they returned with it, university officials formed a committee of faculty, students and administrators to quickly put together a plan to design a simple yet powerful memorial and determine an appropriate site.

A grassy spot was selected in Pease Park framed by a ledge of stones and spotted with trees.

“It is a nice corner of campus where people can experience it in their own individual way,” said Larcom, who explained that due to the strong feelings it may produce, the committee strongly felt the need for a site that gave a certain amount of privacy for visitors.

“It was clear that people needed to be able to touch it and feel the tear in the steel where it was pulled off and where the molten steel had melted the course of the beam,” Larcom said. That's also the reason the beam is faced horizontally and not vertically, he said.

Heavy equipment was needed to lift the beam from the truck and place it on top of a circular platform with steps.

The ground will be configured to build a sidewalk extension in order to be wheelchair accessible and a committee will be formed to determine an inscription to be placed on the memorial.

“There will be room for input from various people and the community, which has been invaluable so far,” said Larcom. “We are very happy that in the space of a month we were able to build a tasteful memorial that everyone is happy with.”

Comments

Are Your Fair?

Thu, Feb 14, 2013 : 1:32 a.m.

Fun to read this piece.

jns131

Tue, Sep 13, 2011 : 3:17 a.m.

The one disappointing thing about Ann Arbor.com is the fact that I did not know when this event was going to take place or where. I knew it was going to happen but didn't know anything. Wish I knew before hand, would have been a nice outing to a rather tragic event. Thanks for the information a day late.

Jen Eyer

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 8:16 p.m.

Off-topic comments were removed.

Cash

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 10:41 a.m.

Political potshots are so insulting to those who died on 9-11 and even more so to the troops who have died since then. United we stand. Divided we fall. It's as though some people, especially on 9-11, the one day we should stand together, would rather we fall than accept the elected government of our country.

Cash

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 12:41 p.m.

This is a post about 9-11.....no political debate. I respect that. How about everyone else?

tdw

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 11:38 a.m.

Cash....Although I 100% agree with your post , I still have to think of the old saying " don't throw stones when you live in glass houses "

A2comments

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 10:37 a.m.

Top pic isn't displaying for me...

G

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 3:50 a.m.

This article has been online since 5:44 p.m., and only one other comment has been posted. I wonder what such silence actually means. Ten years ago I watched newscasts of the Twin Towers collapsing upon themselves, people trapped in the heat jumping out of windows often in pairs, choosing to die from the fall rather than burning to death within. I walked to my child's elementary school in silence I have never before experienced--with no sound of an airplane in the sky and little, if any, highway traffic. Hundreds of other parents converged on my son's school on foot as they had never done before with a powerful mixture of feelings that none of us could have summarized in a few words. People spoke in low voices, gathered their children to themselves, and walked home with their neighbors. That is what I will think about when I look at this memorial. A tasteful memorial to an event that should never be remembered as anything other than an atrocity. "Happy"? No. Do I approve... for what it's worth, yes. Very much. Will it upset/enrage/insult some faction of the student body? Probably. And I approve of that, too.

jns131

Tue, Sep 13, 2011 : 3:20 a.m.

I took my preschooler to her first day of 2nd year preschool. The only thing that made me remember that day? A stray airplane flew over head near Green road with F16's following in hot pursuit. A day that will also live in infamy.

Waterdipper

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 12:19 p.m.

"This article has been online since 5:44 p.m., and only one other comment has been posted. I wonder what such silence actually means." Quiet respectful silence is also an appropriate response to this article. Of course, some individuals have no respect and will use any opportunity to spout-off political diatribe, even if their comment (in this case, one, so far) is so way off-topic that I'm surprised AA.com let it stand. How many times have we seen a blanked out comment with a note saying it was removed because it was off-topic? AA.com???? Your comments, G, on the other hand, are an appropriate and respectful expression of your experience and feelings about the topic....911.

jbhuron

Mon, Sep 12, 2011 : 2:42 a.m.

The worst thing the terrorists did is bring so much hate to this country. 9/11 brought our nation together, but some of our passion has morphed into righteousness and unessary political hatred. Please don't use a remembrance and memorial to spew more xmo.