All Object Lessons
Encounter & Conflict

The Survivors' Staircase: Thirty-Seven Steps That Kept Going

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, citizenship, ethics, art, language
Core question How does a concrete staircase become one of the most important objects in a country's memory of a terrible day — and what does it mean to preserve something ordinary that became extraordinary?
The Survivors' Staircase in the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, New York. Originally an outdoor staircase connecting the World Trade Center plaza to Vesey Street, it was used by hundreds of people to escape on 11 September 2001. Photo: Mark Wyman from NYC Metro , United States of America / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 2.0
Introduction

On 11 September 2001, two planes were flown into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. Almost 3,000 people were killed. It was the deadliest attack on the United States in its history. Many people who were in the buildings that morning needed to find a way out. Some used internal fire stairs. Some were helped by firefighters and police officers, many of whom died in the buildings. Some found their way through smoke and rubble to the outside of the complex. At the northern edge of the World Trade Center plaza, there was an ordinary outdoor staircase connecting the elevated plaza to the pavement on Vesey Street below. The staircase had thirty-seven steps. On the morning of 11 September, hundreds of people used it to escape. They crossed the open plaza, with debris falling from the North Tower above, and reached these steps. For many of them, the stairs marked the moment they reached safety. The staircase survived the collapse of both towers. It was the last above-ground structure from the original World Trade Center still standing. For several years, it simply sat at the edge of the cleared site while people argued about what to do with it. Some wanted it preserved where it was. Others said it was in the way of rebuilding. In 2008, a crane lifted it off its foundations and moved it about 60 metres along Vesey Street. In 2010, it was lowered into what would become the basement of the new National September 11 Memorial and Museum. The museum was built above it. Today, visitors walk down past the staircase as they enter the main exhibition. An ordinary set of stairs became one of the most important objects in a country's memory of the worst day in its recent history. This lesson asks why — and what that teaches us about memory, loss, and the choices communities make about what to keep.

The object
Origin
New York City, USA. Built as part of the original World Trade Center complex in the early 1970s. Now in the National September 11 Memorial and Museum, Lower Manhattan.
Period
Built in the early 1970s as part of the World Trade Center. Used as an escape route on 11 September 2001. Moved to the museum site in 2008. Part of the permanent museum exhibition since 2014.
Made of
Concrete and granite. The staircase has thirty-seven steps. It originally weighed 175 tons and stood 6.7 metres high. By the time it was moved in 2008, much of the surrounding structure had been removed and it weighed about 65 tons.
Size
Thirty-seven steps, originally about 6.7 metres tall. Wide enough for several people to walk abreast. The damage now visible on the steps was caused by the demolition of surrounding buildings after 2001, not by the attacks themselves.
Number of objects
There is one Survivors' Staircase. It is the only surviving above-ground structural element of the original World Trade Center complex.
Where it is now
National September 11 Memorial and Museum, Lower Manhattan, New York City. It is a permanent exhibit, positioned so that visitors descend past it on their way into the main exhibition level.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The attacks of 11 September 2001 are recent history. Some of your students may have family members who were directly affected. How will you create a space that is honest and open without making students feel exposed?
  2. The lesson touches on terrorism, mass death, and political violence. How will you handle these honestly without giving too much detail or creating fear?
  3. Different people have very different views on how 11 September should be remembered and what it means. How will you present this fairly without taking sides on contested political questions?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
On the morning of 11 September 2001, thousands of people were at work in the World Trade Center towers and the surrounding buildings. When the planes hit, the buildings began to burn. People had to decide, very fast, how to get out. Many used internal stairs inside the towers. Some of these stairs were blocked by fire or damage. Some were full of people. Firefighters were going up as workers came down, which slowed everything. It took enormous courage and physical effort to walk down sixty, seventy, eighty, ninety flights of stairs while the building shook and smoked. Some people made it down and out of the buildings onto the plaza. From the plaza, you could reach the street by a wide outdoor staircase on the Vesey Street side. The staircase had thirty-seven steps and two escalators alongside it. For the people who reached it, those steps were the last stretch before safety. Both towers collapsed. The staircase survived. Why might one staircase matter so much to so many people?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because it is specific and it is real. Memorials for large events can become abstract. Numbers become too large to imagine. The staircase is thirty-seven specific steps that specific people walked down on a specific morning. It is a piece of the event that you can stand next to. You can touch it. Survivors remember it. Families of those who died passed it without knowing what was going to happen. It is also a piece of survival, which is a rarer kind of memorial focus than loss. Most memorials focus on the dead. The staircase stands for the people who got out. Students should think about why specific, physical objects often carry meaning that larger numbers or abstract descriptions cannot. The staircase is one concrete step at a time. That concreteness is part of why it matters.

2
After the attacks, the site was cleared slowly over several years. The remains of the buildings were removed, sorted, and in many cases identified. Human remains were searched for. Steel from the towers was cut up and removed. The site was essentially a construction zone for years. The outdoor staircase just sat there, at the edge of the cleared site, looking damaged and forgotten. But survivors and families of the dead began to notice it. Many people had described using these stairs to escape. The staircase began to appear in survivor testimony and in news reports. In 2006, it was listed as one of America's Most Endangered Historic Places. A new skyscraper was planned for the exact site where the staircase stood. Preservation groups and survivors campaigned to save it. Eventually, an agreement was reached. A preservation engineer designed a steel cradle to hold the staircase after it was cut free from its surrounding concrete. In 2008, a crane lifted it across the site. In 2010, it was lowered into the museum space before the building was constructed above it. Who decides what gets preserved — and who gets to decide?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

These are genuinely hard questions. The site involved: the families of almost 3,000 dead people, hundreds of survivors, the city of New York, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the developers who owned parts of the site, the US federal government, preservation organisations, and the public. Everyone had a stake. Not everyone agreed. The process took years and involved public debate, legal negotiations, and political decisions. The staircase is one small example of a much larger series of decisions: what to rebuild, what to memorialize, what names to include, what story to tell, what to show in the museum. Every one of these decisions is contested. Strong answers will see that preservation is always a political act. It involves choosing whose memory matters, whose story gets told, and what future generations will see. The staircase is now a very powerful teaching object. But it nearly became rubble.

3
The National September 11 Memorial and Museum opened in 2014. The memorial is at street level: two large reflecting pools in the exact footprints of the twin towers, with the names of all the dead inscribed around the edges. Below street level is the museum. Visitors enter the museum by walking down a long ramp. As they descend, they pass the Survivors' Staircase on one side. The staircase is displayed behind glass and barrier, fully visible, in its actual damaged state. Beside it are exhibits explaining what happened on the morning of 11 September 2001. The design is deliberate. Visitors physically descend as they enter the museum. They are going down, as the survivors went down. They pass the staircase that some of those survivors used. It is one of the more powerful design decisions in modern memorial architecture. How does a building design shape the way you experience history?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Architecture is communication. Every decision in memorial design carries meaning. Descending into the museum means going below street level, into the ground — like the underground space where so much of the horror of 11 September happened in the collapse. Passing the staircase means passing a real object from that morning, not a replica or a model. The names on the reflecting pools are read at the surface, in open air and daylight — the survivors' world. The memorial is serious and large-scale. The museum is specific and detailed. The combination asks visitors to hold both at once: the scale of the loss and the particularity of each life. Students should think about other examples of memorial design: the Vietnam Veterans Memorial wall in Washington (names engraved in black stone, visitors see their own reflections), the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin (a field of concrete blocks of different heights), the memorial at Srebrenica (white grave markers across a hillside). Each uses physical space and materials to communicate something about what happened. The Survivors' Staircase fits into this tradition.

4
The attacks of 11 September 2001 changed a great deal in the world. The United States and its allies went to war in Afghanistan in 2001 and in Iraq in 2003. Security procedures in airports and public buildings changed. New laws about surveillance were passed. These events and their consequences are still being lived with today. At the same time, the memorial and museum represent a specific American response to a specific tragedy. Other countries have had to make their own decisions about how to memorialize terrorism, war, and mass death. There is no single right answer. The Survivors' Staircase is now visited by millions of people every year. Many are Americans who remember 11 September. Many are visitors from other countries. Many are young people who were not yet born when the attacks happened. For all of them, the staircase is a point of contact with a real event. What questions should any memorial help visitors ask?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

This is an open question that should generate honest discussion. Possibilities include: Who died, and why does their death matter? What choices were made before, during, and after the event? Who was responsible? What happened next? What might have been done differently? Who benefited from the memorial and who did not? Whose voices are included and whose are missing? Strong answers will see that a good memorial does not simply make visitors feel sad or patriotic. A good memorial asks hard questions. It holds complexity. It does not erase difficult parts of the story. The September 11 museum has been praised for its honesty about the events of that day and criticised by some for presenting a particular political view of what followed. This is a real ongoing discussion. Students should see that memorials are not finished objects. They are part of continuing conversations about what happened and what it means.

What this object teaches

The Survivors' Staircase is a concrete and granite outdoor staircase, with thirty-seven steps, that was part of the original World Trade Center complex in New York City. On 11 September 2001, hundreds of people used it to escape after two planes were flown into the twin towers. It was the last above-ground surviving structure of the original complex. After years of debate about whether to demolish or preserve it, it was moved by crane in 2008 and lowered into the space that became the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. The museum opened in 2014. Visitors pass the staircase as they descend into the museum. The staircase is both a physical object from 11 September 2001 and a lesson in how communities make decisions about memory, preservation, and the stories they want to tell future generations.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
Was the staircase damaged by the attacks?YesThe damage visible today was caused by demolition work after 2001, not by the attacks themselves
Was the staircase always going to be preserved?YesIt was nearly demolished in 2006. Survivors and preservation groups campaigned for years to save it
Is the staircase a replica?Many think it might beIt is the real staircase, in its actual damaged state, moved from its original location by crane
How many steps does it have?UnclearThirty-seven steps. It originally weighed 175 tons
Who owns and manages it?The US governmentThe National September 11 Memorial and Museum is a non-profit organisation, though it receives public funding
When did the museum open?Soon after the attacksThe museum opened in 2014, thirteen years after the attacks. Decisions about the site took many years of negotiation
Key words
September 11 attacks
On 11 September 2001, members of the group al-Qaeda hijacked four passenger planes in the United States. Two were flown into the World Trade Center towers in New York, one into the Pentagon near Washington, and one crashed in Pennsylvania. Almost 3,000 people were killed.
Example: The attacks were the deadliest on US soil since Pearl Harbor in 1941. They led to major changes in US foreign and domestic policy, including wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Survivors' Staircase
The official name given to the outdoor staircase at the northern edge of the World Trade Center plaza that was used by hundreds of people to escape on 11 September 2001. It is now displayed in the National September 11 Memorial and Museum.
Example: The staircase was officially listed as one of America's Most Endangered Historic Places in 2006 before campaigning by survivors and preservation groups led to its preservation and eventual installation in the museum.
Memorial
A structure, object, or ceremony that helps a community remember and mark an important event, usually involving death or suffering. Memorials can be physical objects, buildings, ceremonies, or days of remembrance.
Example: Memorials involve choices. The names on the September 11 memorial pools include everyone who died, including the plane hijackers. Some families of victims objected to this. Others supported it. There is rarely a choice that satisfies everyone.
Preservation
The decision to keep and protect an object, building, or site because of its historical or cultural importance. Preservation involves choosing what matters, who gets to decide, and how much it costs.
Example: The Survivors' Staircase was preserved after a campaign by survivors and preservation organisations. Many other objects from the World Trade Center were not preserved. Choices about what to keep always involve choices about what to leave out.
National September 11 Memorial and Museum
A memorial and museum in Lower Manhattan, New York, built on the site of the original World Trade Center. The memorial consists of two large reflecting pools with the names of the dead. The underground museum displays objects and tells the story of the attacks.
Example: The museum opened in May 2014. It is one of the most visited memorial sites in the world, attracting millions of visitors each year from the United States and many other countries.
Contested memory
When different groups of people have different, sometimes conflicting views about what an event meant, how it should be remembered, and who should have a voice in those decisions. Most major historical events are remembered in contested ways.
Example: The September 11 site raised questions that had no easy answers: What should be rebuilt? What should be a memorial? Which names should be included? How should the attacks be explained? Who profits from the museum? These debates continue today.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a basic timeline of events: the attacks on 11 September 2001, the clearing of the site, the debate over preservation of the staircase, the 2006 endangered-places listing, the 2008 crane move, the 2014 museum opening. Use this to discuss how quickly or slowly communities process large-scale tragedy.
  • Citizenship: Discuss the question: who gets to decide what is preserved after a disaster? In the case of the September 11 site, the decision involved survivors, families of the dead, the city of New York, private developers, the US government, and the public. Use this as a case study in how democratic societies make contested decisions.
  • Art: Compare the design of three memorials: the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington (a black wall of names), the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin (a field of concrete blocks), and the September 11 Memorial in New York (reflecting pools in the footprints of the towers). What does each design communicate? What does it ask visitors to feel and think?
  • Language: The staircase has been called by different names: the Vesey Street staircase, the escape stairs, the Survivors' Staircase. Each name emphasises something different. Discuss: why does naming matter? What is gained or lost by each name? Connect to other examples where the name given to an event or place shapes how people understand it.
  • Ethics: The September 11 museum charges an entrance fee. Some families of victims have objected to charging people to visit the memorial. Others say the fee is necessary to maintain the site. Hold a class discussion: should memorials be free? Who should pay for them? Who do they serve?
  • Geography: On a map of New York City, locate Lower Manhattan and the World Trade Center site. Discuss how the site changed: from a commercial office complex to a place of mass death to a construction site to a memorial and museum. The geography of a place can change its meaning entirely within a single generation.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The September 11 attacks were the first major terrorist attack on the United States.

Right

There had been earlier attacks, including a bomb at the World Trade Center in 1993 that killed six people and injured over a thousand. The 11 September attacks were far larger in scale but not the beginning of terrorism in the US.

Why

Presenting 11 September as entirely unprecedented can erase earlier history and make it harder to understand the full context.

Wrong

The Survivors' Staircase is a replica built for the museum.

Right

It is the real staircase, in its actual damaged state, moved from its original location at the World Trade Center site by crane in 2008. The damage visible is from demolition work after 2001, not from the attacks.

Why

Students often assume museum objects of this kind are copies. The physical reality of the original object is a large part of its power.

Wrong

There was no debate about what to do with the September 11 site — it was always going to be a memorial.

Right

The decisions about what to rebuild, what to memorialize, and what to preserve involved years of negotiation between many groups with different interests. The staircase itself was nearly demolished. Nothing about the site was automatic.

Why

Presenting the memorial as an inevitable, uncontested choice hides the real difficulty of how communities make decisions about loss.

Wrong

All Muslims or all Arabs were responsible for the attacks, or were suspected of involvement.

Right

The attacks were carried out by a specific group, al-Qaeda. The vast majority of Muslims and Arabs around the world condemned them. After the attacks, many Muslim and Arab communities in the United States and elsewhere faced discrimination and violence that was wrong and unjust.

Why

This misconception has caused real harm to real communities and must be corrected clearly and without ambiguity.

Teaching this with care

Treat this lesson with the same care you would use for any recent tragedy involving living survivors and grieving families. Many people alive today lost family members on 11 September 2001. Some of your students may have family connections to the events. Be attentive to this without putting students on the spot. Do not ask students to share personal connections unless they volunteer. The attacks were carried out by members of al-Qaeda. Be clear about this and equally clear that they do not represent Islam, Arabs, or any other group. Islamophobia and anti-Arab racism that followed the attacks caused real harm to real communities. Include this in the lesson. Do not present the United States as simply a victim without also noting the wars that followed and their consequences. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq killed many civilians. These are part of the history of 11 September. The lesson focuses on the staircase and the questions of memory and memorialisation, not on the political and military response, but you should be honest if students ask. The museum has been praised for the quality of its exhibits and criticised by some for its presentation. Some families of victims have raised concerns about various aspects of the museum. Treat this as a real ongoing conversation, not a settled matter. Be careful with images. Do not show graphic images of the attacks, the falling towers, or the dead. The staircase itself is a dignified and appropriate image. If using other images, select them carefully. Use the official name: the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. The attacks are referred to as the September 11 attacks, 11 September 2001, or 9/11. All three are in common use. Avoid graphic descriptions of how people died. The lesson is about survival and memory, not about the details of the violence. End the lesson on the present: the staircase is still there, the memorial is still visited, the questions it raises are still being asked.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Survivors' Staircase.

  1. What is the Survivors' Staircase and where is it now?

    The Survivors' Staircase is a thirty-seven-step concrete and granite outdoor staircase that was part of the original World Trade Center in New York. Hundreds of people used it to escape the attacks of 11 September 2001. It is now displayed in the National September 11 Memorial and Museum.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both its use on 11 September 2001 and its current location in the museum.
  2. Why was there a debate about whether to keep the staircase?

    The staircase was sitting at the edge of the cleared World Trade Center site, and a new building was planned for the spot where it stood. Preservationists and survivors campaigned to save it. It was listed as one of America's Most Endangered Places in 2006 before a decision was finally made to move it into the museum.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the planned demolition and the campaign to save it.
  3. How is the staircase displayed in the museum, and why does the display design matter?

    Visitors descend into the museum past the staircase, which mirrors the descent the survivors made on 11 September 2001. The staircase is shown in its actual damaged state, not as a replica. The design is deliberate, using physical movement and a real object to connect visitors to the event.
    Marking note: Strong answers will note both the physical descending movement and the use of the real object rather than a copy.
  4. What does the term 'contested memory' mean? Give one example from the lesson.

    Contested memory means that different groups of people have different views about how an event should be remembered. One example is the debate about charging an entrance fee to the September 11 museum, with some families of victims objecting and others accepting it as necessary.
    Marking note: Award full marks for a correct definition and any reasonable example from the lesson. Other valid examples include the debate about what to include in the museum or what to rebuild on the site.
  5. Why is it important to be clear that the September 11 attacks do not represent all Muslims or Arabs?

    The attacks were carried out by a specific group, al-Qaeda, not by Muslims or Arabs in general. After the attacks, many Muslim and Arab people around the world condemned them. Treating all Muslims or Arabs as responsible is wrong and led to real discrimination and harm against innocent people.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that clearly separates the specific attackers from the broader group and notes the harm caused by generalisation.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Survivors' Staircase was nearly demolished. What other objects from major historical events might have been lost and were not? What does this tell us about how preservation decisions get made?

    Push students to think about objects they know. Examples might include: the Berlin Wall (most of it was demolished, pieces were kept), the USS Arizona at Pearl Harbor (still there, underwater), the remnants of Hiroshima after the bomb (some buildings preserved, others demolished). The deeper question is about who decides and why. Preservation is expensive and controversial. Not everything can be kept. The choices made tell us what a society considers worth remembering. Strong answers will see that the staircase was preserved partly because living people fought for it. Objects without living advocates are more often lost. This is also true of cultural heritage from communities without political power.
  2. The museum charges an entrance fee. Some families of victims say it should be free. Others say the fee is necessary to keep the museum running. What do you think?

    There are real arguments on both sides. Free entry: a national memorial should be accessible to everyone; those who lost family members should not have to pay to visit their loved ones' memorial; public funding should cover costs. Paid entry: the museum costs a great deal to run and cannot rely entirely on public funding; many other important museums charge entry; the fee is relatively low and reduced or free tickets are available for those who cannot afford it. Strong answers will see both sides. The deeper question is: who are memorials for? If they are for the nation and for history, the answer pushes toward free access. If they are for the organisation that runs them to be sustainable, the answer pushes toward paid entry. There is no single right answer. End by noting that this debate happens around many major memorials worldwide.
  3. If your community experienced a major disaster or tragic event, what object from that event do you think should be preserved? What would you do with it?

    This is a creative question that brings the lesson home. Students should be encouraged to think specifically. They might name a building, a vehicle, a personal object, a piece of street furniture. The deeper question is: what makes an object worth preserving? The staircase answer suggests: specific physical connection to the event, testimony from survivors, symbolic meaning beyond the object itself. Push students to think about not just what to keep but where to put it and who would visit it. End by noting that this question will face every community that experiences a major event. The decisions they are discussing now are the kind of decisions real people have to make under difficult circumstances.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'Can a staircase be one of the most important objects in a country?' Take guesses. Then say: 'In New York, there is a concrete staircase with thirty-seven steps that hundreds of people walked down to escape a terrorist attack. It nearly got demolished. It is now in a museum that millions of people visit. We are going to find out why it matters so much.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the staircase: thirty-seven steps, granite-clad concrete, built in the 1970s as a normal outdoor staircase at the World Trade Center. Show the image. On 11 September 2001, it became an escape route. Both towers fell. The staircase survived. Pause and ask: 'Why might people want to keep a damaged concrete staircase?' Listen to answers. They will lead naturally into the ideas of memory and physical connection to events.
  3. THE DEBATE (15 min)
    Explain that the staircase was nearly demolished in 2006. On the board, write two columns: DEMOLISH and PRESERVE. Ask students to suggest arguments for each side. Possible arguments for demolish: it is in the way of rebuilding, it is damaged and unsightly, a replica would do just as well, the money could be better spent. Possible arguments for preserve: it is the real thing, survivors remember it, it is the only surviving above-ground structure, it connects future generations to the real event. Discuss: what finally happened, and why? End by asking: 'Who should get to decide what we keep from the past?'
  4. MEMORIALS AND DESIGN (10 min)
    Explain how the staircase is displayed in the museum — visitors descend past it on the way in. Discuss: why might the museum designers have chosen this approach? Connect to other memorials students may know: the Vietnam Veterans Memorial (a wall of names), the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin (concrete blocks). Ask: 'What do you want people to feel and think when they visit a memorial? How does design shape that?'
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What are the hardest questions that the Survivors' Staircase asks us to think about?' Take honest answers. End by saying: 'Thirty-seven concrete steps. Ordinary on any other day. Extraordinary on one day. The community that built the memorial chose to keep them because they believed that ordinary objects that witnessed extraordinary things deserve to be remembered. You have just thought through some of the hardest questions that decision raises.'
Classroom materials
Design a Memorial
Instructions: In small groups, students are told that a disaster has happened in their community. They must design a memorial. They must decide: (1) one object from the disaster that should be preserved; (2) where the memorial should be located; (3) what visitors should feel as they move through it; (4) whether entry should be free or paid. Each group presents their design. Discuss: what choices did different groups make, and why?
Example: In one class, students designed a memorial to a fictional flood. One group preserved a door from a damaged house. Another group used the waterline mark on the wall of a public building. A third group built a reflecting pool. The teacher said: 'You have just made the same kinds of decisions that the September 11 memorial designers made. Every memorial involves these four questions. There are no obviously right answers. The choices you made tell us what you think memory is for.'
Whose Memory?
Instructions: Read students three short statements (invented, not attributed to real individuals): Statement A: a survivor who used the staircase and wants it displayed exactly as found. Statement B: a family member of someone who died and wants the whole site to be a garden, quiet and calm, with no museum. Statement C: a museum director who wants the most complete collection possible of objects from the site. Ask students: who has the most right to decide? Is there a way to respect all three views?
Example: In one class, students were surprised that the discussion was so hard. Most started by saying 'the survivors should decide' but then realised that the family member's view was also completely understandable. The teacher said: 'You have just discovered why it took years to agree on the September 11 memorial. When different people with different kinds of loss all have legitimate claims, there is no easy answer. What the memorial community eventually did was include as many voices as possible while accepting that no decision would satisfy everyone.'
Name the Staircase
Instructions: Show students three names for the same object: the Vesey Street staircase (its location name), the escape stairs (a functional description), the Survivors' Staircase (the official memorial name). Ask: what does each name focus on? What does each name leave out? Which do students prefer, and why? Then ask: can you think of other cases where different names for the same event or place tell different stories?
Example: In one class, students quickly identified that 'Survivors' Staircase' focuses on the people who lived, while 'escape stairs' focuses on the action, and 'Vesey Street staircase' gives no human meaning at all. A student pointed out that the same location is sometimes called 'Ground Zero' and sometimes 'the World Trade Center site' — each name carrying different meaning. The teacher said: 'You are right. Naming is a form of interpretation. The choice of name is a choice about what to emphasise. This is true of the staircase and it is true of almost every place that has witnessed important events.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Berlin Wall piece for another object that carries the memory of a major event and raises questions about what to keep.
  • Try a lesson on the Palestinian key for another object that embodies the experience of loss, displacement, and contested memory.
  • Try a lesson on the Yiddish prayer book for another object that survived destruction and carries the memory of a community.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a broader project on how the twentieth and twenty-first centuries have been memorialised. The September 11 memorial is part of a long tradition of commemoration.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a discussion of how democratic societies make decisions about contested public spaces. The September 11 site is one of the most studied examples.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a project on memorial design. Students research three memorials of their choice and compare the design choices made in each.
Key takeaways
  • The Survivors' Staircase is a thirty-seven-step concrete and granite outdoor staircase that was part of the original World Trade Center. Hundreds of people used it to escape on 11 September 2001. It is now in the National September 11 Memorial and Museum in New York.
  • The staircase was nearly demolished in 2006. It was saved after a campaign by survivors and preservation groups. In 2008, it was moved by crane and lowered into the space that became the museum.
  • The museum opened in 2014. Visitors descend past the staircase as they enter. The design is deliberate: physical descent mirrors the descent the survivors made on 11 September 2001.
  • Memorials involve choices. Every decision about what to preserve, where to put it, how to display it, and who gets to decide involves competing interests and values. The September 11 site involved years of negotiation between many different groups.
  • The September 11 attacks were carried out by al-Qaeda. They do not represent Islam or Arabs. After the attacks, many Muslim and Arab communities faced unjust discrimination. This is part of the history.
  • The questions raised by the Survivors' Staircase — what to preserve, who decides, how to design memory, who memorials are for — are questions that every community facing loss has to answer. They do not have easy answers, but they are worth asking carefully.
Sources
  • Survivors' Staircase — National September 11 Memorial and Museum (2024) [institution]
  • The Architecture of Memory: The September 11 Memorial — Paul Goldberger (2011) [academic]
  • Survivors' Staircase — America's Most Endangered Historic Places — National Trust for Historic Preservation (2006) [institution]
  • Building the World Trade Center Memorial — New York Times (2014) [news]
  • After 9/11: Memory, Identity, and the Politics of Grief — Marita Sturken (2007) [academic]