Accession Number: C.2015.64.1
Dimensions: 20 ft X 30.5 ft
Dimensions (Metric): 50.8 cm X 77.47 cm
Credit Line: The National 9/11 Flag was restored and donated by New York Says Thank You Foundation thanks to the generous support of KPMG LLP and KPMG Foundation, Edelman, SF Foundation as well as ABNY Foundation, Mutual of America, Jonathan M. Tisch, Nucor, 5Linx, White House Foods, Dentons US LLP, Charles A. Barragato & Co., friends of David Brady, and firefighters from the FDNY, Slidell, Louisiana, and Utica, Illinois who volunteered their time to escort the flag on its 50-state restoration.
The National 9/11 Flag
Description
Large American flag, torn and tattered, that once hung on 90 West Street across from Ground Zero. The flag was mended using various smaller American flags and hand stitching to cover holes and tears. The smaller flags were salvaged from a variety of natural disasters across the country over the course of six years.
Historical Notes
Soon after September 11, 2001, a large American flag was hung on the facade of a building across from the World Trade Center site. In late October, Charles Vitchers, a construction superintendent, noticing the flag growing dirty and tattered, asked ironworkers to take it down. Seven years passed before a plan for its restoration arose.
By then, Vitchers had become involved with the New York Says Thank You Foundation, a charity established by New Yorker Jeff Parness to repay the support the city had received after 9/11. In 2003, foundation volunteers started an annual practice of helping rebuild communities devastated by disaster. Vitchers carried the flag in September 2008 to Greensburg, Kansas, which had been nearly destroyed in a tornado. Greensburg residents began to repair the flag with their own storm-damaged flags. Thus began a nationwide journey of restoration for both the flag and participating communities.
By the 10th anniversary of 9/11, the foundation had taken the flag to all 50 states. In each state, threads or patches from decommissioned American flags were stitched into the flag. The flag was also brought to particular locations for display, among them Shanksville, Pennsylvania, near the Flight 93 crash site. Now known as the National 9/11 Flag, this artifact reflects the resilience of an entire nation.