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Peter Foley: Photographer

By Irish America Staff
April / May 2002

April 1, 2002 by Leave a Comment

On September 11, Peter Foley was riding his bicycle near the West Side Highway in Manhattan when his cell phone rang with the terrible news that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. Not yet realizing the scale of the disaster, but following his instincts as a photographer, Foley immediately set off for the place we now know as Ground Zero, stopping off at his studio on the way to pick up some film. He arrived just after the second tower fell and spent the next six hours at the disaster site documenting relief efforts as all around him fires blazed, gas tanks and manhole covers blew up and chaos reigned.

The Rubble- Shortly after the towers collapsed, hundreds of firefighters comb through the wreckage, hoping to find anyone alive.

Foley, whose photographs feature largely in this issue says, “On one level, I am appreciative of the time I got to document it, and if any one of my photographs has been of value to anyone, that’s great…I got to interact with all those firemen and document their suffering and be part of the whole experience so that future generations can see that there are real consequences of hatred.” The year before, Foley had spent three months documenting life in the Firehouse of Engine 54, Ladder 4 located on 48th Street and 8th Avenue, which lost 15 men.

The Skin- A lone firefighter stands at the base of the outer skin of the South Tower.

“Most people don’t have time to reflect on whether what they’re doing is something of value, but firefighters know that what they are doing matters, and that gives them confidence, a serenity that other people don’t have. They know they are part of something good,” Foley says. He particularly fondly recalls Michael Brennan, “the sweetest, funniest guy who loved the camera and was always mugging for it.” Before he left the firehouse — as a thank you for their hospitality and graciousness — Foley took head shots of all the firefighters.

Exhausted – The first firemen to begin searching through the rubble found the footing to be very unstable With heavy bunker gear and 60-pound air packs, crawling through the twisted steel and concrete, searching for survivors, and contending with the intense heat and waist-deep water became an arduous and exhausting task for firefighters and rescue workers alike.

Ironically, following September 11, Foley was given an assignment by Newsweek to go back to the firehouse. He met Lieutenant Jackson walking out with a poster of those missing from the firehouse that was to be placed at the entrance.

Captains – Just hours after The World Trade Center collapsed, FDNY captains look out at the horror and destruction. Over the course of the following days, they would find out that 343 of their comrades were lost, including 23 chiefs, 22 captains, and 46 lieutenants.

“Hey Peter, your pictures came in handy,” he said. Foley’s pictures were used in a memorial to the dead firefighters. ♦

September 11: A Year in Pictures features more of Peter Foley’s moving pictures from September 11th and the aftermath.

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