New York Daily News

FIRE DEPT. GRADUATION CLASS INCLUDES 3 WITH LINKS TO 9/11

- BY ELLEN MOYNIHAN AND THOMAS TRACY

When newly minted Probationa­ry Firefighte­r Jerome Nedd walked across the stage at the Fire Academy graduation Wednesday, he remembered his father and namesake, a chef killed on 9/11 working at the Windows on the World restaurant near the top of the World Trade Center’s North Tower.

“We played chess a lot together,” Nedd said. “He was a chef, so he cooked a lot. We rode bikes together so we did 5-mile, 10mile bike rides.”

Nedd was 11 when his life changed forever as terrorists flew passenger jets into the World Trade Center, killing his father and more than 2,600 others, including 343 members of the FDNY.

Two decades later, Nedd decided to dedicate his life to becoming a firefighte­r, honoring those who desperatel­y tried to save his father that fateful day.

“Firefighte­rs went to that building and tried to get them out,” Nedd, 33, told the Daily News. “And those brave heroes that died in that building — I wanted to be like one of them. I wanted to help people, too.

“That was one of the worst days of my life,” he said. “And when somebody loses their home or somebody loses a family member in a fire, that’s one of their worst days, and I want to be there for them.”

Nedd was one of three FDNY Academy graduates with links to 9/11 at the ceremony Wednesday at Brooklyn’s Christian Cultural Center.

Another graduate, Probationa­ry Firefighte­r Brian Sullivan, is the son of Lt. Christophe­r Sullivan of Ladder 111, who was last seen racing up World Trade Center stairs to help those still trapped inside.

Probationa­ry Firefighte­r Henry Hinton is following in the footsteps of his father and grandfathe­r, both FDNY lieutenant­s.

His father, also named Henry, worked in Engine 275 and retired from the 1st Battalion a month before 9/11. But, after the terror attacks, he went back to work to help search for survivors at Ground Zero.

Henry’s father died of 9/11-related cancer in 2021.

“It’s big for our family,” Hinton, 35, said of the graduation ceremony. “[It’s a] great day, but also sad. I wish my dad was here. “I wish he was here to see this,” he said. Hinton fondly recalled how he used to go to Engine 275 with his dad.

This week, the Southampto­n, L.I., resident will show up there as a member of the firehouse.

“I went there for the first time on Monday night,” Hinton said. The firehouse was as he remembered it.

“A couple of people came up and said ‘Hey, you look familiar. Did your dad work here?’ ”

The FDNY welcomed 298 probationa­ry firefighte­rs into the department Wednesday.

Half are people of color, with 30% identifyin­g as Hispanic. Ten women were also in the graduating class.

“We continue to see more women and people of color join this department and demonstrat­e this job can be done by anyone who is dedicated to become a member of New York’s Bravest,” said Fire Commission­er Laura Kavanagh.

Kavanagh participat­ed in the class’ Spirit Run, a longstandi­ng tradition in the department in which the graduates run around the academy at the end of 18 weeks of rigorous training in fire suppressio­n, medical response and complicate­d rescues.

The graduation ceremony kicked off with a video of the probationa­ry class thanking their families for all their support.

The video also led Nedd to remember his father.

“I definitely thought about him today,” he said. “There’s just like a full circle moment.”

The audience at Wednesday’s graduation ceremony was better behaved than the audience at an FDNY promotion ceremony last Thursday.

During that event, pro-Trump firefighte­rs booed state Attorney General Letitia James and screamed “Trump! Trump!” over her launching a fraud prosecutio­n against the former president.

On Sunday, Kavanagh returned to the Christian Cultural Center to apologize for the firefighte­rs’ conduct.

“Not only is the Fire Department the greatest department in the world, it’s also the most profession­al fire department in the world, and we let down that reputation on Thursday,” she said.

 ?? FDNY ?? Newly minted FDNY Probationa­ry Firefighte­rs Henry Hinton, Jerome Nedd and Brian Sullivan feel pride over their graduation, but also sadness over their connection to Sept. 11, 2001.
FDNY Newly minted FDNY Probationa­ry Firefighte­rs Henry Hinton, Jerome Nedd and Brian Sullivan feel pride over their graduation, but also sadness over their connection to Sept. 11, 2001.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States