This ceremony honors deceased 9/11 Rescue and Recovery Responders who came to help during the nine-month Rescue and Recovery Effort at the World Trade Center site following the attacks of September 11, 2001. By calling their names we invoke their memory and call out our gratitude for their service. All 9/11 Responders will be remembered regardless of the reason for their death.
Hosted by the 9/11 Community of New York City and streamed live here on Trinity's website. If you miss the live stream, check back later; the on-demand video will be posted shortly. Proof of vaccination and masks will be required. To submit names or donations, visit callingofthenames.org.
Trinity's Rector, the Rev. Phillip A. Jackson, rings the Bell of Hope in St. Paul’s Churchyard in a pattern of “four fives” (five strikes, repeated four times), the traditional firefighters’ salute to the fallen. Following prayers, the bell is rung precisely at 8:46am, the time when the first plane crashed into 1 World Trade Center (North Tower).
The bell, a gift from London to New York City a year after the attacks, is rung on September 11 anniversaries and to remember victims of terrorism and mass shootings. Join us for this brief and moving service on September 11, 2022.
Trinity's new pipe organs include the Noack organ in St. Paul’s Chapel; a pipe organ built by Richards Fowkes & Co. for the Chapel of All Saints; and the grandest of them all, an eight-thousand pipe instrument manufactured in Germany, in Trinity Church.
In part two of her series on stained glass at Trinity Church Wall Street, Dr. Susan Ward explores the evolving theology demonstrated by the stained glass in the Chapel of All Saints.
Susan Ward, art professor, Vestry member, and parishioner of Trinity Church Wall Street, leads a tour of the stained glass in the nave of Trinity Church.