Showing posts with label Lower Manhattan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lower Manhattan. Show all posts

Monday, April 24, 2023

Bloomers In The Big Apple ...

“Where flowers bloom, so does hope.”

       ~ Claudia “Lady Bird” Johnson

               ~ 1912 ~ 2007

    ~ First Lady of the United States of America

                 ~ 1963 ~ 1969

   ~ Second Lady of the United States of America

                  ~ 1961 ~ 1963

Lady Bird Johnson contributed to spreading hope & beautifying America by promoting the use of wildflowers along the highways of the nation. She was an advocate for beautifying the nation’s cities & highways, and the Highway Beautification Act of 1965 was informally known as “Lady Bird’s Bill.” It was the pet project of the First Lady, who believed that beauty, & generally clean streets, would make the United States a better place to live.

Beautiful tulips are in full bloom in Lower Manhattan on a gorgeous mid-April afternoon in New York City ~ The Big Apple.


 

Thursday, June 11, 2020

FDNY Dream Bike ...


“No day shall erase you from the memory of time.”
   ~ Virgil
    ~ 70 B.C. – 19 B.C.
I shot this image of the FDNY Dream Bike at the National September 11 Memorial Museum on an April day in Lower Manhattan, New York City.

In the summer of 2001, Firefighter Gerard Baptiste, FDNY Ladder Company 9, purchased a battered 1979 Honda motorcycle, model CB750. Baptiste believed that he could restore it to good working order. His fellow firefighters joked that it would take time and money just to start the engine. Following Baptiste’s death in the North Tower on 9/11, the broken-down motorcycle remained at the firehouse until a memorial tribute in “Backroads” magazine inspired Baptiste’s colleagues to restore the bike in his memory. Surviving members of Ladder Company 9, with support from Honda and motorcycle enthusiasts nationwide, transformed the motorcycle into a “bike of healing” known as the Dream Bike. Ten roses painted on the cover its gas tank symbolize the members of Ladder Company 9 and Engine Company 33 who were killed on 9/11.

The documentary film “FDNY Dream Bike,” directed and written by John Allison, was released in 2005.

The Virgil quote has been fashioned out of salvaged remnants of damaged World Trade Center steel and is located in Memorial Hall inside the museum, where it will stand in perpetuity at the site of the attacks as a promise that we will never forget those taken from us on that terrible day.