Overview:
Families and communities in New York City continue to honor the legacies of the 2,983 people killed on 9/11, including the 12 Black firefighters who died. The Black Vulcan Society, founded by Wesley Williams, the city's first Black battalion chief, was created to combat discriminatory practices within the FDNY. The Vulcan organization remains strong, and families of 9/11 firefighter victims are invited to their annual Brooklyn memorial service. Leroy Homer Jr., the Black First Officer of United Airlines Flight 93, was co-piloting one of the planes the morning of the hijacking. His wife started the LeRoy W. Homer Jr. Foundation to encourage young people from underrepresented communities to pursue professional careers in aviation.
Although 24 years have passed since the terrorist attack of September 11, 2001, New York Cityโs dedicated families and communities that lost loved ones on that fateful day continue to honor their legacies.
โPart of our duty as a memorial museum is to commemorate and honor the 2,983 people that were killed on 9/11 and in the 1993 bombing,โ said Dylan Williams, the 9/11 Memorial & Museum Curatorial Assistant. โAll these people had rich lives with their own kind of hopes and dreams and aspirations, things that they were working on, things that they were doing, things that they would look forward to. And so we use artifacts that were donated to us to tell that story.โ
The 12 Black Firefighters Lost but Not Forgotten
There were 343 New York City Fire Department (FDNY) firefighters who died on 9/11 withย 12 of them being Black firefighters. Their names were as follows: Gerard Baptiste, Capt. Vernon Cherry, Tarel Coleman, Andre Fletcher, Keith Glascoe, Ronnie Henderson, William Henry, Karl Henri Joseph, Keithroy Maynard, Vernon Richard, Shawn Powell, and Leon Smith Jr.
โWithin the walls of the firehouse, we each have a responsibility to ourselves to protect each other because of one common denominator, life. I worked ten years in Brownsville, East New York, and Bedford-Stuyvesant, and all brother firefighters know that death in fires does not discriminate,โ wrote Cherry, in a letter found in his locker before the tragedy. The letter was donated by his family to the 9/11 Memorial & Museum and highlighted inย its brief documentary from last year.
These twelve lost were also members of the FDNYโsย Black Vulcan Society. The fire departmentโs first Black member, William A. Nicholson, was relegated to tending to the horses for Engine Company 6 in 1898. After enduring four decades of harrowing racism within the department, Black firefighters gained recognition and rose through the ranks. Wesley Williams, the cityโs first Black battalion chief, founded the Vulcan Society for the over 50 Black firefighters employed in 1940. The organization combatted entrenched discriminatory practices within the FDNY, fought vociferously for diversity among its ranks, and created a sense of community and refuge for its members.
The Vulcan organization remains strong. This yearโs Vulcan president, Jonathan Logan, and current firefighters invited the families of 9/11 firefighter victims to their annual Brooklyn memorial service at the First Quincy Community garden.
โOur loved ones are gone, but weโre still trying to keep their memory alive,โ said Irene Smith, the mother of Leon Smith Jr., who founded theย FF. Leon W. Smith Jr Foundation to give out student scholarships in his honor. She recalled that her son often experienced the hardship of being a Black firefighter in the city over the course of 19 years on the job, but he was determined to be treated with respect and dignity.
She championed a street renaming on Hancock Street in Brooklyn in his honor. She said part of her ritual is going to her sonโs firehouse for a memorial ceremony and attending a lunch with family members of other Vulcans at a nearby diner. They then head over to the annual garden memorial service. She added that itโs also free to place a tribute for 9/11 victims inย The New York Daily Newsย memorial section, which she does twice a year.
Smith is very close with Vulcan Society family members like Monique Powell, who lost her brother Shawn Powell, and Leila Joseph, who also lost her brother Karl Joseph on 9/11. Powellโs brother has been immortalized in a co-naming of Monroe Street in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn. Joseph spearheaded theย FF. Karl Henri Joseph Education Fund Incย to honor her brother, who was a young probie when he passed.
โWe draw strength from each other,โ said Joseph. The Joseph family and friends may go to the site in Manhattan, attend a memorial mass at church, but ultimately, every year, they meet up at the Vulcan ceremony. โFor me, itโs a comfort to see other people every year, seeing some of the other families.โ
Vernon Maynard, the older brother of Keithroy Maynard, added that his family tries to make the best of every day but says there is definitely a void. He recalled being excited to vote that morning in 2001 with his brother, and hoped that he would come home initially after he heard about the plane crash. He said that the Vulcan Society and its community have been a major support for his family. โUp to this day, I have to keep going. Sometimes going back and forth to work brings the emotion,โ said Maynard. โIt hits you when you realize.โ
A Black Co-Pilot
A lesser known name from the 9/11 tragedy isย Leroy Homer Jr., the Black First Officer of United Airlines Flight 93, who was co-piloting one of the planes the morning of the hijacking. Homer was a fighter pilot for the armed forces, turned commercial pilot. He received many awards posthumously for his heroic actions alongside the other flight crew, like the Dr. Martin Luther King Congress of Racial Equality Award (CORE), the Westchester County Trailblazer Award, and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference Drum Major for Justice Award.
His wife, Melodie Homer, startedย the LeRoy W. Homer Jr. Foundationย to encourage young people from underrepresented communities with an interest in flying to pursue professional careers in the field of aviation. โI recognized that LeRoy was left out of the story and people didnโt understand what his role was that day,โ she said in the documentary.
This post by Ariama C. Long appeared first on New York Amsterdam News.
The post {{post title}}, https://wordinblack.com/2025/09/service-and-sacrifice-remembering-black-men-in-uniform-lost-on-9-11/ appeared first on Word in Black.ย
