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Obama: ‘We Come Together’ At 9/11 Memorial Museum

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President Barack Obama marked the dedication of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York on Thursday, declaring it a monument to the enduring memory of those lost 13 years ago in worst terrorist attack ever on American soil—and to the spirit of the nation.

“Here, at this memorial, this museum, we come together,” Obama said in Foundation Hall below the World Trade Center site. “We stand in the footprints of two mighty towers graced by the rush of eternal waters. We look into the faces of nearly 3,000 innocent souls, men and women and children of every race, every creed, from every corner of the world. And we can touch their names and hear their voices and glimpse the small items that speak to the beauty of their lives—a wedding ring, a dusty helmet, a shining badge. Here we tell their story so that generations yet unborn will never forget.

“Like the great wall and bedrock that embrace us today, nothing can ever break us,” Obama said. “Nothing can change who we are as Americans.”

First responders, survivors, and victims’ families gathered to mark the opening of the site, which also serves as the resting place for thousands of unidentified remains of those killed in the attack. Almost 3,000 people died in the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, when al-Qaeda operatives hijacked and flew airplanes into the iconic Twin Towers and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. A fourth plane crashed in Pennsylvania.

After a rebuilding was marred by years of delays, Obama was joined by a host of notables including former President Bill Clinton, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, and former New York mayors Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg. Obama paid tribute to “the man with the red bandana,” Welles Crowther, a 24-year-old equities trader in the South Tower who gave his life saving more than a dozen survivors that day.

“Those we lost live on in us, in the families who love them still, in the friends who remember them always and in a nation that will honor them now and forever,” Obama said, flanked by the “Last Column,” the makeshift memorial that was the final piece of rubble removed from the site and now stands in the museum alongside thousands of other artifacts.

Among the artifacts are Flight 93 passenger Todd Beamer’s watch, frozen at the moment the plane was forced down in Shanksville, Pa, survivor Florence Jones’ shoes, which she carried down 60 stories and 50 city blocks as she fled the carnage, and Crowther’s red bandana. Faces of the dead line a memorial hall, where visitors can watch videos and read stories about those who lost their lives.

Exclusive Pictures of the New 9/11 Museum

9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
A shattered portion of the enormous broadcasting antenna that topped the north tower of the World Trade Center.Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
Some of the massive artifacts salvaged from the towers almost have the appearance of abstract sculpture, like this 10,000 pound elevator motor.Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
The exterior skin of the museum’s irregularly shaped entry pavilion is banded with alternating stripes of polished and matte finish stainless steel, which meet an angular wall of clear glass.Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
Two 80 ft. (24 m) “tridents” from the World Trade Center’s facade rise through the glass-enclosed atrium of the museum’s entry pavilion, with its crisscrossing steel trusswork. The stairway leads down to the mostly belowground museum.Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
The remains of “Ladder 3." On the morning of the attacks, it carried 11 firefighters to the scene. All of them died in the collapse of the towers.Floto+Warner for TIME
Joseph Ruzicka—CCNY
A photo by modern pictorialist photographer Joseph Ruzicka, an early member of the Camera Club of New YorkJoseph Ruzicka—CCNY
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
An interior gallery displays the “Cross at Ground Zero." A steel T-beam salvaged from the wreckage of the towers, it became a rallying point for rescue and recovery workers at the site. Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
A twisted fragment of steel from the north tower testifies to the immense heat and pressure of the Trade Center collapse.Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
This pay phone, found in the wreckage at Ground Zero, was once installed on the 107th floor observation deck of the south tower, more than a quarter mile above the street.Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
A river line valve sits in the museum’s Foundation Hall before a portion of the Trade Center’s slurry wall, a barrier that held firm after the towers collapsed, preventing the Hudson River from inundating lower Manhattan.Floto+Warner for TIME
9/11 September 11 Memorial Museum
The “Survivors’ Stairs” were an escape route used by many people on 9/11. At the museum they have been installed alongside the final stretch of the ramp by which visitors make their way down to the exhibition galleries.Floto+Warner for TIME

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