Stamford Advocate

INSIDE: Sherwood Island holds Connecticu­t’s 9/11 ties.

Sherwood Island holds Connecticu­t’s 9/11 ties

- By Amanda Cuda

WESTPORT — Looking across Long Island Sound on a clear day can be a breathtaki­ng sight even now — 20 years after the 9/11 attacks, said John Guglielmon­i, the parks and recreation supervisor at Sherwood Island state park.

“On a crisp, clear day, the Freedom Tower is very much in focus,” Guglielmon­i said, referring to One World Trade Center the main building of the rebuilt World Trade Center complex in New York.

Though Guglielmon­i wasn’t working at Sherwood Island when the 9/11 attacks occurred, he’s heard the stories of workers and residents who stood at the state park on that day watching the events from a distance.

“People were there sort of witnessing from afar,” Guglielmon­i said. “That’s our line of sight. That’s our direct connection.”

Due to its proximity to New York, Sherwood Island was also identified as a potential staging area in the wake of the terror attacks, though it was never activated.

But in the 20 years since the attacks, Sherwood Island has become a major part of how Connecticu­t residents honor those who were killed on 9/11, including those who lived here. For almost 20 years, the memorial has been the home of a 9-foot long granite memorial stone, set into a grassed area so visitors face the Manhattan skyline upon viewing it.

It bears an inscriptio­n reading, “The citizens of Connecticu­t dedicate this living memorial to the thousands of innocent lives lost on September 11, 2001 and to the families who loved them.” The memorial is also engraved with the names of those with connection­s to Connecticu­t who died.

Westport First Selectman Jim Marpe said the memorial is a profound testament to the impact the terrorist attacks had on Westport and its residents.

“Virtually every Westporter who lived here on September 11, 2001, was directly impacted by the the tragic events that day in lower Manhattan, as well as Washington D.C and Shanksvill­e, Pa.,” he said in a statement this week.

In addition to those who died, “some of us were in the Twin Towers or downtown that day and barely escaped with our lives; riding home on packed Metro-North trains covered with dust and ashes. Others of us witnessed the horrific events from other parts of New York City. And some stood witness where the Sherwood Island memorial is now located and watched the tragedy unfold 50 miles away on that clear, crisp, early autumn day,” Marpe continued.

Due to the effect the tragedy had on the community, Marpe said, having the memorial in town is deeply meaningful.

“Standing at this memorial space at Sherwood Island State Park reminds us of the thousands of innocent lives lost on 9/11 and the heroic reactions of so many first responders,” he said. “But it also reminds us to live each day to the fullest and to conduct our lives in a manner that honors those who left us on that terrible day.”

The memorial — funded through the U.S. Forest Service Living Memorials Project grant program, as well as private donations — was dedicated in September 2002.

Each year around the 9/11 anniversar­y, a ceremony is held at the memorial, during which the names of the 161 victims with ties to Connecticu­t are read aloud. This year’s ceremony was planned for Thursday evening.

But Guglielmon­i said the memorial isn’t just for the annual ceremony. “People come to pay respects on birthdays, anniversar­ies and all times of year,” he said.

Over the years, he said, many organizati­ons have worked to maintain the memorial site, including area businesses, high school sports teams and, most notably, the Friends of Sherwood Island. The group, among other things, provides the white roses that are handed out at the annual memorial ceremony.

The group has also worked to maintain the grounds surroundin­g the memorial, Friends President Liz-Ann Koos said. Koos said she wasn’t around when the memorial was first installed, as she didn’t move to Westport until 2004.

However, she has her own connection to Sept. 11, as she was living in Bronxsvill­e, N.Y., and working for the New York Stock Exchange on the day of the attacks.

Though she wasn’t at the World Trade Center when planes hit the towers that morning, she had colleagues who were, and Koos was evacuated from her office on Wall Street to the trading floor.

“Luckily, (no one I knew) died,” Koos said.

 ?? Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Bridgeport resident Fred Haschak looks at the names on the indoor memorial as Connecticu­t holds the 19th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony on Sept. 10, 2020, at Sherwood Island State Park in Westport.
Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Bridgeport resident Fred Haschak looks at the names on the indoor memorial as Connecticu­t holds the 19th annual 9/11 memorial ceremony on Sept. 10, 2020, at Sherwood Island State Park in Westport.

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