Ground Zero with President Bush: Iconic 9/11 firefighter dies

Ground Zero with President Bush
Iconic 9/11 firefighter dies

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New York City firefighter Bob Beckwith returns from retirement as the September 11, 2001 attacks shock the world. A photo of him with President Bush at his side will go down in history. He has now died at the age of 91.

Former firefighter Robert “Bob” Beckwith, who became famous for a photo taken alongside then US President George W. Bush after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 in New York, is dead. Beckwith died at the age of 91, like the fire department the US metropolis announced. Fire Chief Laura Kavanaugh said the “iconic photo” at the site of the World Trade Center destroyed by the 9/11 attacks captured a moment that was “both inspiring and heartbreaking.”

Beckwith 2006 with the original helmet: The New York firefighter has now died at the age of 91.

Beckwith 2006 with the original helmet: The New York firefighter has now died at the age of 91.

(Photo: AP)

Former President Bush said he was “proud” to have had Beckwith at his side back then. The Republican wrote on

The famous photo was taken three days after 9/11 during Bush’s first visit to Ground Zero. The photo shows the then-president with a megaphone in his right hand, his left arm draped over firefighter Beckwith’s shoulders. Bush said at the time to the emergency services who were searching the rubble for possible survivors: “I can hear you, the whole world hears you, and the people who brought down these towers will all hear from us soon.”

Back from retirement at 69 for Ground Zero operations

Beckwith, born in 1932, had actually long since retired at the time of the terrorist attacks. He retired from the fire department in 1994. After the attacks, however, he reported back to work at the age of 69, like many former firefighters.

Al-Qaeda Islamists killed almost 3,000 people in attacks carried out in four hijacked planes in New York, Washington and the state of Pennsylvania. The attacks shook the United States to its core and sent the world power into a decades-long “war on terror.”

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