On September 11, 2001, the world stopped. One year later, survivors, family members, rescue workers, and millions around the globe gathered to remember. This video captures the opening two hours of the first memorial service held at Ground Zero—a raw, solemn moment as a nation paused to honor the 2,977 lives lost and the immeasurable impact of that day.
The Setting
By September 2002, Ground Zero had become sacred ground. The site—once a smoking crater of twisted steel and heartbreak—was now a place of remembrance. No permanent memorial stood yet; that would take years to build. Instead, the empty space itself became the memorial, a stark reminder of what was taken.
The first anniversary service brought together an estimated 5,000 people to the site: families reading the names of those lost, officials offering words of remembrance, and survivors bearing witness. Across the country, candlelight vigils, ceremonies, and moments of silence unfolded. The nation was still processing grief, anger, resilience, and the uncertain new world that 9/11 had created.
What This Video Captures
This footage documents the opening hours of that September 11, 2002 ceremony—the speeches, the readings, the moments of silence that hung heavy over the city. You’ll hear official remarks, names being called, and the collective voice of a community refusing to forget.
Watching it now, nearly two decades later, the video is a time capsule. It shows us who we were one year after—still raw, still grieving, but beginning the long process of rebuilding.
Why This Matters
The first anniversary was a pivotal moment. It was the first time the nation officially gathered at Ground Zero to remember. It was also a moment when questions lingered: Why did this happen? What comes next? How do we move forward?
This service represents a turning point—from the shock and devastation of 2001 to the determination to rebuild, remember, and honor those we lost. The memorial that would eventually stand on that site took years to complete, but it all began with gatherings like this one.
A Moment to Remember
Whether you lost someone that day, lived through it, or are learning about it for the first time, this video is an important historical record. It’s a testament to how communities gather in the face of unimaginable loss, and a reminder of the resilience that followed.
The names read that day—each one a person, a life, a story. Watching this ceremony is a way of honoring their memory.
More from the 9/11 archive
- ← Earlier: Ground Zero, Months After
- Later: First Train Back: The WTC PATH Station Reopens (2003) →
- Browse the full 9/11 Archive →
David Daniels has been writing at DavidDaniels.com since 2001. Download the free life planning workbook, Write Open Act, to start mapping the gap for yourself.