United Airlines
Flight 175 |
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These pages are dedicated to all the Innocent people who
lost their lives on the 9-11-2001 at the WTC, Pentagon and Aircraft.
While I watched the events
unfold on the 9-11-2001 in my hotel room and saw airplanes crash in to the WTC
I gave a thought to what it must have been like on the hijacked airplanes. I
have always had a problem with flying - it just makes me feel uneasy - but I
cannot comprehend the terror that each and every passenger on these airplanes
must have suffered - may they all rest in peace.
UNITED AIRLINES FLIGHT 175
United Airlines Flight 175, from Boston, Massachusetts, to Los Angeles,
California, was the second hijacked plane to strike the World Trade Center,
plowing into the south tower. Two pilots, seven flight attendants and 56
passengers were on board.
Here is a list of the terrorist victims. There are few pictures on this site
to remember these victims by, so where possible I have included some personal
information to allow the reader to connect to these REAL people - they
were just like you or me.
CREW
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Capt. Victor Saracini, 51, of Lower Makefield Township, Pennsylvania, was
a Navy veteran. He is survived by his wife and two children.
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Michael Horrocks was first officer.
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Robert J. Fangman was a flight attendant.
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Amy N. Jarret, 28, of North Smithfield, Rhode Island, was a flight
attendant.
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Amy R. King was a flight attendant.
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Kathryn L. Laborie was a flight attendant.
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Alfred G. Marchand of Alamogordo, New Mexico, was a flight attendant.
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Michael C. Tarrou was a flight attendant.
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Alicia N. Titus was a flight attendant.
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PASSENGERS
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Alona Avraham, 30, was from Ashdot, Israel.
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Garnet "Ace" Bailey, 53, of Lynnfield, Massachusetts, was director of pro
scouting for the Los Angeles Kings hockey team. Bailey was entering his 33rd
season as a player or scout in the National Hockey League and his eighth with
the Kings. Before joining the Kings, he spent 13 years as a scout for the
Edmonton Oilers, a team that won five Stanley Cups during that time. As a
player, Bailey spent five years with the Boston Bruins and was a member of
Stanley Cup championship teams in 1969-70 and 1971-72. Bailey also spent
parts of two seasons each with the Detroit Red Wings and St. Louis Blues, and
three years with the Washington Capitals. He is survived by his wife,
Katherine, and son, Todd.
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Mark Bavis, 31, of West Newton, Massachusetts, was entering his second
season as an amateur scout for the Los Angeles Kings. A Boston native, he
played four years on Boston University's hockey team, where his twin brother,
Michael, is an assistant coach. In addition to his twin brother, Bavis is
survived by his mother, Mary; two other brothers, Pat and Johnny; and three
sisters, Kelly, Mary Ellen and Kathy. The Bavis family lost a brother 15
years ago, and Bavis' father died 10 years ago.
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Graham Berkeley, 37, of Xerox Corp. was from Wellesley, Massachusetts.
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Touri Bolourchi, 69, was from Beverly Hills, California.
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Klaus Bothe, 31, of Germany was on a business trip with BCT Technology
AG's chief executive officer and another executive. Bothe joined the company
in 1994 and was its director of development. He is survived by his wife and
one child.
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Daniel Brandhorst, of Los Angeles, California, was a lawyer for
PriceWaterhouse.
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David Brandhorst, 3, was from Los Angeles.
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John Cahill was from Wellesley, Massachusetts.
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Christoffer Carstanjen, 33, of Turner Falls, Massachusetts, was staff
assistant in the office of information technology at the University of
Massachusetts-Amherst.
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John Corcoran "Jay" Corcoran, 44, of Norwell, Massachusetts, was a
merchant marine.
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Dorothy Dearaujo, 82, was from Long Beach, California.
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Gloria Debarrera
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Lisa Frost, 22, of Rancho Santa Margarita, California, graduated from
Boston University this year, with degrees in communications and business
hospitality. She is survived by her father, mother and brother.
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Ronald Gamboa, 33, of Los Angeles, California, was a Gap store manager.
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Lynn Goodchild, 25, was from Attleboro, Massachusetts.
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The Rev. Francis E. Grogan, 76, of Easton, Massachusetts, was a priest at
Holy Cross Church in Easton. A veteran of World War II, Grogan served as a
parish priest, a chaplain and teacher at Holy Cross schools.
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Carl Hammond, 37, was from Boston, Massachusetts.
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Peter Hanson, 32, of Groton, Massachusetts, was a software salesman.
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Susan Hanson, 35, of Groton, Massachusetts, was a student.
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Christine Hanson, 3, was from Groton, Massachusetts.
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Gerald Hardacre
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Eric Hartono
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James E. Hayden, 47, of Westford, Massachusetts, was the chief financial
officer of Netegrity Inc. Hayden is survived by his wife, Gail, and their two
children.
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Robert Jalbert, 61, of Swampscott, Massachusetts, was a salesman.
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Ralph Kershaw, 52, of Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, was a marine
surveyor.
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Heinrich Kimmig, 43, chairman and chief executive officer of BCT
Technology Ag, of Germany was on a business trip involving contract
negotiations with U.S. partners along with two other BCT execs, the company
said in a statement. Kimmig studied mechanical engineering in college. After
an internship, he became the design manager at Badische Stahl Engineering,
and shortly after, he founded BSE Computer-Technologie GmbH, originally a
locally operating software company. In 1999, this company became BCT
Technology AG. Kimmig is survived by his wife and two children.
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Brian Kinney, 29, of Lowell, Massachusetts, was an auditor for
PriceWaterhouse Cooper.
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Robert LeBlanc, 70, of Lee, New Hampshire, was a professor emeritus of
geography at the University of New Hampshire. After earning his doctorate at
the University of Minnesota, LeBlanc joined the University of New Hampshire's
faculty in 1963 as a cultural geographer. With a specialty in Canadian
studies, he looked at the Franco-American communities in New England's mill
towns. He was acting chair and chair of the geography department for nearly
10 years, retiring in 1999.
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Maclovio "Joe" Lopez Jr., 41, was from Norwalk, California.
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Marianne MacFarlane
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Louis Neil Mariani, 59, was from Derry, New Hampshire.
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Juliana Valentine McCourt, 4, was from New London, Connecticut.
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Ruth McCourt, 24, was from Westford, Massachusetts.
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Wolfgang Menzel, 60, of Germany joined BCT Technology AG in 2000 as
director of human resources. He is survived by his wife and one child. Menzel
had planned to retire in six months.
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Shawn Nassaney, 25, was from Pawtucket, Rhode Island.
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Patrick Quigley, 40, of Wellesley, Massachusetts, was a partner at
PriceWaterhouse Cooper.
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Frederick Rimmele was a physician from Marblehead, Massachusetts.
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James M. Roux, 42, was from Portland, Maine.
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Jesus Sanchez, 45, was an off-duty flight attendant from Hudson,
Massachusetts.
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Kathleen Shearer was from Dover, New Hampshire.
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Robert Shearer was from Dover, New Hampshire.
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Jane Simpkin, 35, was from Wayland, Massachusetts.
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Brian D. Sweeney, 38, was from Barnstable, Massachusetts.
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Timothy Ward, 38, of San Diego, California, worked at the Carlsbad,
California-based Rubio's Restaurants Inc. A 14-year veteran of the company,
he opened its second restaurant in San Diego and most recently worked in the
information technology department.
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William Weems of Marblehead, Massachusetts, was a commercial producer.
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Remember these victims
- any one of them could have just as easily have been you. Terrorism is a sick
way of imposing the terrorists twisted will upon you - never allow that
to be.
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