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With communities across the United States marking 24th anniversary September 11, 2001terrorist attacks that shocked the country, thousands of families continue to grieve the personal losses of their loved ones.
A Brooklyn family is respecting their son and brother Jimmy Quinn New York Metropolis The match against the Texas Rangers on September 12. The event will provide a dedication and respectful tribute to young financial professionals who died tragically at work.
“Jimmy has lived more in her life in just 23 years than most people have in their lifetime,” Joe Quinn, a U.S. Army veteran and Jimmy’s brother, told Fox News Digital.
On September 11, 2001, the United States experienced the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history

Jimmy Quinn was remembered by his brother when he died at the North Tower of the World Trade Center at the age of 23. (Joe Quinn)
“Even after 24 years, it’s hard not to have it,” he said.
Jimmy graduated from Manhattan College the year before her death. Quinn said he passed his seventh exam a few weeks before September 11, 2001.
“He’s been in front of him all his life, and he loves it,” Quinn said. “He used to say ‘I work on top of the world’ and that’s how he feels about the beginning of life.”
At the time, Quinn, a senior at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, described cadets, including himself, usually moving like clockwork.
“I remember that morning, the situation was in the situation.” “Callings usually whisper when they don’t whisper.”
Quinn’s roommate is called Student Army In my ears, the Twin Towers were on fire.
“The first tower collapsed, the south tower, my heart fell off,” he said. “I was very busy at the pastry point at the time and I didn’t even know which tower he was at. When the north tower collapsed, it was probably the hardest part of it. It was a little bit, your brain knew he was probably there, but your heart didn’t want to believe it.”
Quinn recalled the impact of the takeoff on the World Trade Center, which looked like “compared to the size of the tower.”
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Former President George W. Bush addressed the United States after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack. (Photo by Roger L. Wollenberg-Pool/Getty Images)
Quinn said in a few days after the attack on the United States that killed nearly 3,000 people, that his father was a retired New York Police Department official, “the dining table at the table is like a police district.”
“Slowly every day, it becomes more and more terrifying, and like many other families, we never found his remains,” he said.
“It sounds crazy, but until today, 0.00001% of your brain has this slightly promising because there is never real evidence,” Quinn added. “He disappeared for us.”
Quinn graduated from West Point In 2002, and in 2003, it was deployed to Iraq.
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The 9/11 memorial and museum are free and open to the public seven days a week. (Fatih Aktas/Anadolu agents via Getty Images)
Quinn’s parents and West Point cite him as willing to ease his active duty, he said.
“I won’t hear anything,” he said. “To say I’m a perfect student, my senior year will be a lie. I’m really struggling, but thank God, I did.”
Quinn trusted his appeal to serve with his brothers at that time and today.
“I lost a brother, but my wife is Iraq,” he said. “We lost thousands of soldiers overseas, and many families lost brothers because they raised their right hands to serve the country after 9/11. ”
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As managing director of Drexel Hamilton, an experienced and operating investment bank, Quinn accepted his day job to honor his brother.
“We do very normal, boring investment banking, but we also have a recruiting mission. Veterans,” he said.
He also serves as a member of the Museum’s Visionary Network Leadership Committee at the 9/11 Memorial and Museum.
“It’s an important part of my recovery and my family’s recovery,” Quinn said. “His name on the pole is where we want to respect us.”