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Closings and cancellations following the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks

Following the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack, several institutions responded with closures, cancellations, and postponements. Some of the most significant included...

Table of contents
1 Closings
2 Evacuations
3 Cancellations
4 Postponments
5 Travel effects
6 External link

Closings

(taken to mean unusual closures on September 11, for any reason)
  • The stock exchanges on Wall Street. Wall Street never opened its stock markets on September 11, even as CNN continued to show futures numbers early in the day. Partly as Wall Street itself was covered in debris from the World Trade Center, and due to infrastructure damage, it remained closed until Monday, September 17 - four days total.
  • The Washington Monument
  • The Statue of Liberty
  • The Virginia State Capitol
  • Other US landmarks, including the Seattle, Washington Space Needle.
  • All federal buildings in Washington, D.C., including the White House. Approximately one million federal workers were sent home across the country.
  • The Supreme Court
  • All schools in Maryland
  • Resorts and vacation spots
  • Reagan airport
  • All federal and state buildings in the state of Massachusetts
  • US-Canada land border closed

Evacuations

(taken to mean evacuation in light of perceived threat of attack)

Cancellations

Postponments

Travel effects

All civilian airplane traffic in the United States was grounded until Thursday, September 13. United Airlines cancelled all flights worldwide temporarily. First stranded planes were allowed to go to their intended destinations, then limited service resumed. On Thursday night the New York area airports (JFK, La Guardia, Newark) were closed again, and were reopened Friday morning. The only traffic from La Guardia during the closure was a single C9C government VIP jet, departing at approximately 5:15PM on the 12th.

All train service through Union Station was suspended.

Beginning September 27, one-occupant cars were banned from crossing into Lower Manhattan from Midtown on weekday mornings, in an effort to relieve some of the crush of traffic in the city (the morning rush hour was lasting from 5:30 AM to noon), caused largely by the increased security measures put in place.

September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack - Full Timeline
In Memoriam - Casualties - Missing Persons - Survivors - Personal experiences
Donations - Assistance - Closings and Cancellations - Memorials and Services
US Governmental Response - Responsibility - Hijackers - Political effects - Economic effects

External link





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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Closings and cancellations following the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks".