
- In New York, the moving tribute started at 8:46 a.m. - the time when the first plane hit the twin towers back in 2001
- Families of the victims started reading aloud the names of the almost 3,000 people who died
- A second bell tolled at 9:03 a.m. to mark when the second plane hit the towers, then the reading of names resumed
- Several politicians attended, including former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, but none gave an address
- In Washington, President Obama marked the 12th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks with a moment of silence
- At the Pentagon Sept. 11 memorial in Arlington, Va., victims' families, attack survivors and military officials laid a wreath and held a moment of silence at 9:37 a.m. to mark the moment that Flight 77 hit the building
- In Pennsylvania at 10:03 a.m., bells were rung and names of passengers and crew members were read at the Flight 93 National Memorial
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Relatives of the September 11 victims gathered at ground zero in New York City today to commemorate the 12th anniversary of the attack that killed almost 3,000 people.
The moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. Wednesday marked when the first plane hit the twin towers on a clear, sunny day in 2001. Then, families of the victims started reading aloud the names of those who died.
Along with the names of those who died when the hijacked jets crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were read out the names of those killed in the hijacked Flight 93 and the victims of the 1993 trade center bombing.
Scroll down for video
 
President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle 
Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and Jill Biden stand for a moment of 
silence on the South Lawn at the White House in Washington, as they mark
 the 12th anniversary of the September 11 terror attacks
 
Mija Quigley of Princeton Junction, New Jersey, embraces the name of her son Patrick Quigley who died on 9/11
 
First responders gather in lower Manhattan 
at the World Trade Center site as the nation commemorates the 
anniversary of the 2001 attacks which resulted in the deaths of nearly 
3,000 people after two hijacked planes crashed into the World Trade 
Center, one into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia and one crash 
landed in Shanksville, Pennsylvania
 
The World Trade Center Flag is presented as 
friends and relatives of the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks 
gather at the National September 11 Memorial at the World Trade Center 
site on Wednesday morning
 
Carrie Bergonia looks over the name of her 
fiance, firefighter Joseph Ogren, during ceremonies at the 9/11 Memorial
 marking the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks
 
Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani, left, and current 
New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, right, at the 9/11 Memorial ceremony 
to mark the 12th Anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center in
 New York
 
Kayla Fallon, daughter of William Fallon who
 died on 9/11, wipes away tears at the 9/11 Memorial during ceremonies 
marking the 12th anniversary
 
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, left, and 
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, right, pictured at the ceremony at the 
9/11 Memorial
 
President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle 
Obama put their hands on their hearts during the playing of 'Taps' as 
they stand on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington
 
Family members of New York City firefighter 
Christopher A. Santora from Engine 54, Ladder 4, Battalion 9, who died 
in the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center, observe a moment of 
silence during a ceremony near the firehouse on West 48th street
 
Flowers and pictures are displayed by a name along the north reflecting pool at the 9/11 Memorial
 
Retired FDNY Marshal Ernie Medaglia, of 
Bronxville, N.Y., who was at the attacks at the World Trade Center on 
Sept. 11, 2001, is emotional as he listens to New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo
 at a ceremony near the 9/11 Memorial honoring first responders and FDNY
 Rescue 1 on the 12th anniversary of the attacks
 
 
A woman wipers her eyes after reading the name 
of her brother, Bobby Hughes, at the National September 11 Memorial, 
left, and a pair of people embrace, right,  as friends and relatives of 
the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks
 
A TSA color guard takes part in a ceremony at Cleveland Hopkins Airport Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013, marking the 12th anniversary
A second bell tolled at 9:03 a.m. to mark when the second plane hit the twin towers. Then the reading of the names resumed. Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former 
Gov. George Pataki attended, as well as Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Gov. 
Anthony Cuomo and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.
President
Barack Obama marked the 12th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks with a
moment of silence on the South Lawn of the White House.
Obama,
along with first lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and wife
Jill Biden, walked out of the White House at 8:46 a.m., EDT, the moment
the first plane hit the World Trade Center tower in New York a dozen 
years ago. 
They bowed their heads to observe a moment of silence, which 
was followed by a bugler playing taps.
'It is an honor to be with you
 here again to remember the tragedy of 12 Septembers ago, to honor the 
greatness of all who responded and to stand with those who still grieve 
and to provide them some measure of comfort once more,' Obama said. 
'Together we pause and we give humble thanks as families and as a nation.'
The
 president then attended a Sept. 11 observance at the Pentagon where he 
laid a wreath during a ceremony marking the 12th anniversary of the 
worst terror attack on the U.S.
While
 Obama made no direct mention of the crisis in Syria, he vowed to 
'defend our nation' against the threats that endure, even though they 
may be different than the ones facing the country during the 2001 
attacks.
 
President Barack Obama, accompanied by Defense 
Secretary Chuck Hagel, wipes his face as he speaks during a 9/11 
remembrance ceremony at the Pentagon on Wednesday morning
 
President Barack Obama lays a wreath at the 
Pentagon during a ceremony marking the 12th anniversary of the worst 
terror attack on the U.S.
 
US President Barack Obama, left-rear, and others
 salute during the playing of the US National Anthem during a memorial 
service at the National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial
 
A woman prays at the edge of the North Pool at 
the 9/11 Memorial during a ceremony marking the 12th anniversary of the 
9/11 attacks
‘Let us have the wisdom to know that 
while force is sometimes necessary, force alone cannot build the world 
we seek,’ Obama said during a ceremony at the Pentagon.
Among
those gathered at the Pentagon on Wednesday where family members of those 
killed on Sept. 11, 2001. Many wore red, white, and blue striped ribbons
and some cried as the president spoke.
‘Our hearts still ache for the futures snatched away, the lives that might have been,’ Obama said.
The
president also paid tribute to the four Americans killed one year ago 
in an attack on a U.S. compound in Benghazi, Libya, asking the country 
to pray for those who ‘serve in dangerous posts’ even after more than a 
decade of war.
In a 
commemorative event at the Justice Department, Attorney General Eric 
Holder called on an audience of several hundred employees to remember 
'the nearly 3,000 innocent people whose lives were lost' and to pay 
tribute to the 72 law enforcement officers who were killed trying to 
save others.
 
Friends and relatives of the victims of the 9/11
 terrorist attacks gather at the National September 11 Memorial at the 
World Trade Center site
 
 
Relatives of the victims of gather, left, at the
 National September 11 Memorial at the World Trade Center site, while 
Daniel Henry, right, a Port Authority of New York/New Jersey police 
officer observes a moment of silence at 9:01 am EDT
 
Hannah Townsend, 25, gives a prayer next to the One World Trade tower at Ground Zero on September 11, 2013 in New York City
 
Singer Billy Joel, left, and motorcycle designer
 and television personality Paul Teutul, Jr., look up at One World Trade
 Center Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2013, after they rode with firefighters and
 first responders with the FDNY Motorcycle Club from FDNY Rescue 1 
headquarters to the World Trade Center site
 
Gail Silke, left, and her niece Erica Tierney 
trace the name of Gail's brother Steven Bristoll who died while working 
as a police officer on September 11, 2001
 
Relatives rub the names listed on the edge of a 
reflecting pool at the 9/11 Memorial during ceremonies marking the 12th 
anniversary of the attacks on the World Trade Center
 
The names of those who died when the hijacked 
jets crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were read out 
at the ceremony at the two-year-old memorial plaza
 
Family members of Ji Yao Justin Zhao pay their 
respect to him at the South Poll of the 9/11 Memorial during ceremony 
marking the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks
 
The World Trade Center Flag is presented as 
friends and relatives of the victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks 
gather at the National September 11 Memorial
UNITED IN REMEMBRANCE: THE DIFFERENT EVENTS MARKING THIS YEAR'S 9/11 ANNIVERSARY
NEW YORK CITY
In a sadly familiar ceremony, friends and relatives of World Trade Center attack victims gathered at the National Sept. 11 Memorial plaza to call out the names of the dead and read messages to their lost loved ones.
A bell tolled to mark the moments when four hijacked jets crashed into the twin towers, the Pentagon and a field in the Pennsylvania countryside, and again to mark the moments when the two skyscrapers collapsed.
Several politicians attended, including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former New York Gov. George Pataki, but none gave an address.
WASHINGTON
President Barack Obama held a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. on the White House's South Lawn to mark the first attack in New York. He was joined by Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and his wife Jill Biden. A bugler played 'Taps.'
At the Pentagon Sept. 11 memorial in Arlington, Va., victims' families, attack survivors and military officials laid a wreath and held a moment of silence at 9:37 a.m. to mark the moment that Flight 77 hit the building.
PENNSYLVANIA
More than 200 people gathered at the Flight 93 National Memorial to read the names of 40 passengers and crew killed when the airliner crashed into a field near the small town of Shanksville.
Recalling the passengers and crew who had fought the hijackers, U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell told the assembled families and spectators, 'We never know when we'll be called to lay down our lives for others.'
In a sadly familiar ceremony, friends and relatives of World Trade Center attack victims gathered at the National Sept. 11 Memorial plaza to call out the names of the dead and read messages to their lost loved ones.
A bell tolled to mark the moments when four hijacked jets crashed into the twin towers, the Pentagon and a field in the Pennsylvania countryside, and again to mark the moments when the two skyscrapers collapsed.
Several politicians attended, including New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former New York Gov. George Pataki, but none gave an address.
WASHINGTON
President Barack Obama held a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. on the White House's South Lawn to mark the first attack in New York. He was joined by Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and his wife Jill Biden. A bugler played 'Taps.'
At the Pentagon Sept. 11 memorial in Arlington, Va., victims' families, attack survivors and military officials laid a wreath and held a moment of silence at 9:37 a.m. to mark the moment that Flight 77 hit the building.
PENNSYLVANIA
More than 200 people gathered at the Flight 93 National Memorial to read the names of 40 passengers and crew killed when the airliner crashed into a field near the small town of Shanksville.
Recalling the passengers and crew who had fought the hijackers, U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell told the assembled families and spectators, 'We never know when we'll be called to lay down our lives for others.'
'Daddy, I miss you so much, and I think about you every day,' Christina Aceto said of her father, Richard Anthony Aceto. 'You were more than just my daddy, you were my best friend.'
Near the memorial plaza, police barricades blocked access to the site, even as life around the World Trade Center looked like any other morning, with workers rushing to their jobs and construction cranes looming over the area.
'No matter how many years pass, this time comes around each year - and it's always the same,' said Karen Hinson of Seaford, N.Y., who lost her 34-year-old brother, Michael Wittenstein, a Cantor Fitzgerald employee.
'My brother was never found, so this is where he is for us,' she said as she arrived for the ceremony with her family early Wednesday.
Continuing a decision made last year, no politicians will speak, including Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Over his years as mayor and chairman of the National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum, Bloomberg has sometimes tangled with victims' relatives, religious leaders and other elected officials over an event steeped in symbolism and emotion.
But his administration has largely succeeded at its goal of keeping the commemoration centered on the attacks' victims and their families and relatively free of political image-making.
'Joe, we honor you today and all those lost on Sept. 11,' said Kathleen O'Shea, whose nephew Joseph Gullickson was a firefighter in Brooklyn. 'Everyone sends their love and asks that you continue to watch over us all, especially your wife.'
Memorial organizers expect to take primary responsibility for the ceremony next year and say they plan to continue concentrating the event on victims' loved ones, even as the forthcoming museum creates a new, broader framework for remembering 9/11.
'As things evolve in the future, the focus on the remembrance is going to stay sacrosanct,' memorial President Joe Daniels said.
Hinson said she would like the annual ceremony to be 'more low-key, more private' as the years go by.
The 12th anniversary also arrives with changes coming at the Flight 93 National Memorial in Shanksville, where officials gathered Tuesday to herald the start of construction on a visitor center.
Around the world, thousands of volunteers have pledged to do good deeds, honoring an anniversary that was designated a National Day of Service and Remembrance in 2009.
When Bloomberg and then-Gov. George Pataki announced the plans for the first anniversary in 2002, the mayor said the 'intent is to have a day of observances that are simple and powerful.'
His role hasn't always been comfortable. When the ceremony was shifted to nearby Zuccotti Park in 2007 because of rebuilding at the trade center site, some victims' relatives threatened to boycott the occasion.
The lead-up to the 10th anniversary brought pressure to invite more political figures and to include clergy in the ceremony.
 
Jose Rosales observes a moment of silence 
honoring the victims of the September 11 attacks outside the World Trade
 Center site, where bagpipes, bells and a reading of the names of the 
nearly 3,000 people killed took place to mark the 12th anniversary of 
the Sept. 11 attacks in 2001
 
TSA agents sing 'God Bless America' at a 
checkpoint in Cleveland Hopkins International Airport on Wednesday, 
Sept. 11, 2013, during a ceremony marking the 12th anniversary of the 
2001 terrorist attacks
 
A woman gazes at the One World Trade Center as 
church bells toll for 9/11 victims on the anniversary of the 2001 
attacks which resulted in the deaths of nearly 3,000 people after two 
hijacked planes crashed into the World Trade Center, one into the 
Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia and one crash landed in Shanksville, 
Pennsylvania
 
Friends and family members gather at the 9/11 
Memorial during ceremonies marking the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 
attacks on the World Trade Center in New York
 
President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle 
Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and Jill Biden observe a moment of 
silence to mark the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the South 
Lawn of the White House in Washington
By next year's anniversary, Bloomberg will be out of office, and the museum is expected to be open beneath the memorial plaza.
While
the memorial honors those killed, the museum is intended to present a 
broader picture of 9/11, including the experiences of survivors and 
first responders.
But 
the organizers expect they 'will always keep the focus on the families 
on the anniversary,' Daniels said. 
That focus was clear as relatives 
gathered last September on the tree-laden plaza, where a smaller crowd 
was gathering Wednesday - only friends and family of the victims were 
allowed.
Bruni Sandolval carried a large photo of childhood friend Nereida DeJesus, a victim.
'We
grew up together on the Lower East Side and I come every year with her 
family,' she said. 'Coming here is peaceful in a way.'
Denise Matuza, who lost her husband on Sept. 11, said people ask her why she still comes to the service with her three sons.
'It
doesn't make us feel good to stay home,' she said. Her husband called 
after the towers were struck. 'He said a plane hit the building, they 
were finding their way out, he'd be home in a little while. I just 
waited and waited,' she said.
'A few days later I found an email he had sent that they couldn't get out.'
 
Obama, along with first lady Michelle Obama, 
Vice President Joe Biden and wife Jill Biden, walked out of the White 
House at 8:46 a.m., EDT, the moment the first plane hit the World Trade 
Center tower in New York a dozen years ago
 
Steven Campbell pauses on September 11, 2013 to remember his wife Jill Maurer-Campbell during the 9/11 Memorial ceremonies
 
Antoni Cortes, and his wife Grace clean a 
portrait of their daughter Adrianed Oyola as they pay their respect to 
her at the South Pool at the 9/11 Memorial during ceremony marking the 
12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks
 
Hector Garcia of Brooklyn and his daughter Tania
 hold a placard with a photo of their daughter and sister Marlyn who 
died in the attacks as they attend ceremonies for the twelfth 
anniversary of the terrorist attacks on lower Manhattan at the World 
Trade Center site
9/11 12TH ANNIVERSARY: THE HEROES OF FLIGHT 93 ARE REMEMBERED IN PENNSYLVANIA
 
Visitors to the Flight 93 National Memorial 
participate in a sunset ceremony with a giant flag memorializing Flight 
93 on Tuesday
In Pennsylvania at 10:03 
a.m., bells were rung and names of passengers and crew members were read
 at the Flight 93 National Memorial.
The
 families of the passengers and crew aboard United Flight 93 recalled 
their loved ones as heroes who made history with unselfish and quick 
actions.
'In a period 
of 22 minutes, our loved ones made history,' said Gordon Felt, the 
president of the Families of Flight 93, whose brother, Edward, was among
 the 33 passengers and seven crew members aboard the hijacked plane on 
Sept. 11, 2001.
Families
 of those aboard the plane, along with nearly 200 more people, read the 
names aloud and bells tolled, as they marked the 12th anniversary of the
 Sept. 11 attacks.
Flight
 93 was traveling from Newark, N.J., to San Francisco when it was 
hijacked with the likely goal of crashing it into the White House or 
Capitol.
As passenger 
Todd Beamer issued the rallying cry 'Let's roll,' he and several fellow 
passengers rushed down the airliner's aisle to try to overwhelm the 
hijackers after learning of the coordinated attacks on the World Trade 
Center and the Pentagon.
The 9/11 Commission concluded that the hijackers downed the plane as the hostages revolted.
As
 the names were read, a light haze began to burn off the surrounding 
hills. The memorial wall of white stone has each victim's name engraved 
on a separate panel, and the scene was framed by yellow wildflowers 
behind the stones.
U.S. Interior Secretary Sally Jewell recalled the sacrifice the passengers made.
'We
 never know when we'll be called to lay down our lives for others,' she 
said, speaking of the bravery of passengers and crew who fought back 
against the hijackers.
The
 reading of names and tolling of bells was the first part of the Flight 
93 National Memorial's plans to honor the victims of the Sept. 11 
attacks.
Later 
Wednesday, park rangers and volunteers will give presentations about 
Flight 93 and the creation of the memorial park, which is located in 
Shanksville, about 75 miles southeast of Pittsburgh.
A
 groundbreaking for a 6,800-square-foot visitor center was held Tuesday.
 The building will be broken in two at the point of the plane's flight 
path overhead. It is expected to open in late 2015.
The
 first features of the memorial in Shanksville were completed and 
dedicated in September 2011, including new roads and a Memorial Plaza 
near the crash site. Forty memorial groves of trees have also been 
planted, and large sections of the park have been replanted or 
reforested.
The tale of
 the courageous actions of everyday people aboard Flight 93 helped 
provide a measure of optimism for the American public in the dark days 
and weeks that followed the terrorist attacks.
It
 also inspired a 2006 docudrama, 'United 93,' the first big-screen 
dramatization about the terrorist attacks that used a cast of unknown 
actors and played out roughly in real time from the passenger check-in 
to the crash.
Visitors 
to the park have left more than 35,000 tributes at the site, and they 
have been collected as part of an archival collection.
 
Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell, center, 
pauses as she places a lantern at the wall containing the 40 names of 
the crew and passengers of Flight 93 at the Flight 93 National Memorial 
on Tuesday
 
A photo of New York City Firefighter James 
Crawford who died during the attacks of September 11, 2001 was put there
 by his family as they came to participate in the 9/11 Memorial 
ceremonies marking the 12th anniversary
 
Relatives at the 9/11 Memorial during a ceremony
 marking the 12th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade 
Center in New York City 
 
People walk along the 9/11 Memorial as the 
nation commemorates the anniversary of the 2001 attacks which resulted 
in the deaths of nearly 3,000 people after two hijacked planes crashed 
into the World Trade Center, one into the Pentagon in Arlington, 
Virginia and one crash landed in Shanksville, Pennsylvania
 
A woman walks along Hudson River at sunrise 
across from New York's Lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in 
Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey, September 11, 2013
 
Tribute In Light: Two beams were lit on Tuesday behind the Statue of Liberty in preparation for today's anniversary
 
Iconic: The tribute shines above the Manhattan 
skyline. Today the names of almost 3,000 people killed in the World 
Trade Center and 9/11 attacks will be read out at ground zero
 
Stunning: The powerful Tribute In Light is one of a number of memorial plans for the 12th anniversary
 
Memorial: The light display commemorates the twin towers of the World Trade Center
 
Memorial: The tribute has been an annual fixture since 2010 after first being installed in 2002 
 
Ring of light: The Tribute in Light can be seen rising above buildings in lower Manhattan, during a test on Tuesday
 
Focus: Memorial organizers are expected to take 
primary responsibility for the annual memorial from next year and say 
the families of victims will remain the focus of the ceremonies
 
Lighting up the city: The two columns, made up 
of 88 searchlights, was originally installed in 2002 by New York's 
Municipal Art Society
 
For everyone: On clear nights, the lights can be seen from over 60 miles away and visible to all of New York City
 
In the distance: A Brooklyn subway passes over a bridge as New York City's Tribute In Light shines in the background
 
The world mourns: New York will host a memorial at ground zero and ceremonies will be held across the U.S. and the globe
 
9/11: Nearly 3,000 people died when four 
hijacked planes were used in coordinated strikes on the Pentagon and the
 World Trade Center towers (pictured). The fourth plane crashed in 
Pennsylvania
 
Poignant: 3,000 flags are placed in memory of those killed on September 11 at a park in Winnetka, Illinois
 
Fitting: The flags represent each person killed in the coordinated strikes on the U.S. 12 years ago
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2417276/America-remembers-3-000-victims-9-11-attacks-ground-zero-anniversary-service-mark-12th-anniversary.html#ixzz2ebXWJM9p
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2013: Time-lapse: New WTC tower
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