sept 11 20th anniversary
How did Sept. 11 change our security and privacy? From airport searches to digital surveillance
From metal detectors in public buildings to digital surveillance, Sept. 11 changed our security and privacy
For air traffic controller, 9/11 memories of hijacking over Greater Cleveland still vivid, frustrations remain
George "Bill" Keaton was monitoring Flight 93 when it disappeared off radar.
Pop culture after 9/11: How TV, movies and music coped with tragedy
The aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001 caused a major shift in popular media.
See eight 9/11 memorials around Northeast Ohio that are well worth a visit (photos)
The memorials honor the 2,977 civilians, firefighters and law enforcement officers who were killed in the attacks, as well as honoring the nearly 6,000 people injured that day. They're all open to the public.
How do you explain Sept. 11 to kids?
When you teach your children about Sept. 11, 2001, be prepared for a lot of questions about the terrorist attack. How did the bad guys get control of the plane? How did they fly it? What were they trying to hit? How many people died? What happened to the remnants of the plane? And most of all, why?
Northeast Ohio veterans who deployed after 9/11 conflicted over tumultuous Afghanistan withdrawal
The war in Afghanistan has gone on for 20 years, making it America's longest war.
Sept. 11 was supposed to be football game day. Instead, the world changed: 9/11 remembered
Politics reporter Seth Richardson recounts how 9/11 changed the world.
The 20th anniversary of 9/11: Events, broadcasts honor lives lost in Sept. 11 attacks
Local events remember the nearly 3,000 people that lost their lives in the deadliest terrorist attack on U.S. soil 20 years ago on Sept. 11, 2001.
Former Secret Service agent calls Sept. 11 “the most traumatic day of my career”
Greg Truhan was a Secret Service Field agent based in Cleveland when the first plane struck the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. He was the only agent from Cleveland who was assigned to the investigation at Ground Zero. Twenty years later, he recalls that day -- and the emotional pain and the health battles he has faced because of it.
‘I knew the world had changed and would never be the same again:’ Reader memories of Sept. 11
Dozens of cleveland.com and the Plain Dealer readers share their memories of Sept. 11 on the 20th anniversary.
The day the show didn’t go on: Jeannie Emser Schultz
The 9 a.m. atmosphere at Playhouse Square was supercharged with excitement as the Radio City Rockettes prepared for an outdoor Cleveland appearance that noon, with country music singer Dwight Yoakum due in for a concert that night. Then, the first plane struck the Twin Towers, 20 years ago this week, and everything changed, writes Jeannie Emser Schultz, marketing manager at Playhouse Square, in a guest column today.
Share your Sept. 11 stories, for 20th anniversary coverage
What are your memories of Sept. 11, 2001? Cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer are collecting your stories.