Saturday, September 10, 2011
 
sponsored by


How a special post-9/11 helmet memorializes a local firefighter

Send a link to a friend

[September 10, 2011]  Three months after the tragic events of Sept. 11, 2001, Mark Miller, then assistant chief for the Lincoln Fire Department, and his good friend and fellow firefighter Toby Jackson of Decatur made a journey to New York City.

Their intent was to offer help in any way they could to a city that had lost 343 firefighters in the attacks on the World Trade Center.

Before they left, Miller decided he wanted to do something that would perhaps make a difference for someone else in the future.

He ordered a plain black firefighter helmet and a special front shield to take with him on his trip.

The shield carried the lettering "F.D.N.Y." above the number 343, and below, the words "NEVER FORGET."

In the week that Miller was in New York, he spent time with a couple of different companies of the city's fire department network. He visited ground zero and saw firsthand the massive destruction around the lower Manhattan area.

He spent time with various firefighters and noted that most of them were reluctant to talk about what had happened on 9/11. He carried the helmet with him, asking various firefighters to place their signatures on the black surface.

"I didn't want anyone to think I was trying to make a fast buck off of this, so I always explained that I intended to hold on to the helmet and someday offer it as an auction item for a very worthy cause."

Miller said most everyone was willing to affix their signature, so by the end of the week the helmet was covered with names written in white, many accompanied with their company or division name.

The firefighters in Lincoln occupy the majority of the space on the second floor of City Hall, with offices, a kitchen and eating area, a dormitory, and a lounge area.

The hallway is decorated with various mementos of the department, many of them dating back to the earliest of days in Lincoln.

Just off the elevator there is a plaque that says:

One day you will be old, you will be frail, and you will be slow and someone will ask you: "What did you do in your day? What did you do in your prime when you were young and strong and fast?" You will tell them that you were a firefighter, and when the day is done, and the page is turned, that will be enough.

In New York, 343 firefighters never got the opportunity to grow old and frail, although no one will ever deny that what they gave to try to save the lives of thousands was more than "enough."

But it is good to remember that they are not the only firefighters to ever lose their lives. Many have died in the line of duty, and many have left life for other reasons, but all of them were still firefighters and held in high regard by their fellow firefighters, their families and their communities.

[to top of second column]

Not long after Miller returned to Lincoln from New York, one of his own, Austin Bahn, was diagnosed with cancer.

Bahn's battle with cancer was long and hard, and it took its toll on the family's finances.

When a day came that Miller heard there was going to be a fundraiser for Bahn, he knew this was the special cause the helmet had been meant for.

Miller remembers the auction at the fundraiser. He recalls that there were many, many items donated and that bidders were generous.

He also recalls what happened when the helmet came to the auction block. "A lot of our guys were there, and they just kept bidding and bidding."

In the end, the city firefighters pooled their resources and purchased the helmet and brought it back to City Hall.

Every firefighter has a flame-resistant coat with their last name on the back in reflective letters.


When Austin Bahn lost his battle with cancer in 2004, the Lincoln department put together a wall in his memory.

Just off the elevator on the second floor sits the special helmet on a wood shelf, inside a glass case. Above it hangs a beautiful print reflecting the patriotism and dedication of all firefighters. The case is flanked by the U.S. flag and the state flag, and below the case hangs Austin's coat.

[By NILA SMITH]

< Top Stories index

Back to top


 

News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching and Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries

Community | Perspectives | Law and Courts | Leisure Time | Spiritual Life | Health and Fitness | Teen Scene
Calendar | Letters to the Editor