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Kevin Larkin, a firefighter and Brooklyn native now living in Downingtown, lost his friend Eric Olsen, a New York firefighter, on Sept. 11. "Americans have short memories. People forget," he said. "This is an inspiration to bring back the memory of the people who died that day." John Gillen, 71, who worked in shipping for Lukens Steel in the late 1960s when the World Trade Center steel was being forged, recalled how the enormous beams made their way to New York on railroad cars specially configured to hold such a massive weight. Lukens employees were always proud of everything they made, from armored plating for aircraft carriers to sonar spheres for submarines to the steel skin of what were among the tallest skyscrapers in the world. That feeling was evident even during the horrible days after 9/11, Gillen said. "Everyone was so proud the day after (Sept. 11), when we saw they were still standing," said Gillen, who retired after 40 years at Lukens. "They were standing, and we made them."
___ On the Net: National Iron and Steel Heritage Museum:
http://www.steelmuseum.org/
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