NEW YORK (AP) - The new Navy assault ship USS New York, built with World Trade Center steel, arrived in its namesake city Monday with a 21-gun salute near the site of the 2001 terrorist attack.
First responders, families of Sept. 11 victims and the public gathered Monday at a waterfront viewing area, where they could see the crew standing at attention along the deck of the battleship gray vessel.
The USS New York passes the Statue of Liberty while fireboats spray water in New York, Monday, Nov. 2, 2009. The new Navy assault ship USS New York, built with World Trade Center steel, has arrived in its namesake city with a 21-gun salute near the site of the 2001 terrorist attack.
A woman walks under the trees covered in snow on November 1, 2009 in Beijing, China. The Chinese capital embraced its first heavy snowfall in winter.
Getty
A torch bearer, left, is lead to a waiting truck before his torch was extinguished by organizers and driven to a new location after protestors disrupted the route for the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic Games torch relay on Vancouver Island in Victoria, B.C., on Friday October 30, 2009.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck
In this undated photo made available by the family, Paul and Rachel Chandler, who went missing when sailing from the Seychelles to Tanzania after sending a distress signal on Friday, Oct. 23, 2009, are seen at an unknown location. Britain's Foreign Office said Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2009 that searches are under way for a British couple missing after their yacht activated a distress beacon off Somalia. The Foreign Office said Tuesday it is checking reports the couple may have been seized by pirates.
AP Photo/PA
This handout image taken Wednesday Oct. 28, 2009 made available Thursday Oct. 29, 2009 by EU NAVFOR shows the yacht Lynn Rival belonging to a British couple apparently taken captive by pirates off the east coast of Africa. The British navy on Thursday found an empty yacht in international waters belonging to a missing British couple and a defense official said Somali pirates may have transferred them to another vessel. International naval forces have been searching for the couple for days. Paul and Rachel Chandler were heading to Tanzania in their yacht, the Lynn Rival, when a distress signal was sent last Friday.
AP Photo/ EU NAVFOR
Greek hurdler Fani Halkia takes part in the Greek leg of the torch relay for the Vancouver 2010 Olympic flame under the ancient Acropolis in Athens, late Wednesday Oct. 28, 2009. Greek officials will hand the flame over to Canadian organizers on Thursday, Oct. 29. Former Olympic champion Halkia was expelled from the Beijing Olympics after testing positive for a banned steroid, is currently serving a two-year competition ban for doping. She carried the Vancouver torch from the foot of the Acropolis to the entrance of the archaeological site, where the flame remained overnight. Greek Olympic officials had no immediate comment on her selection for the relay.
AP Photo/Newsports, Nikos Chalkiopoulos
An abandoned car sits alongside Colorado Highway 93 as a winter storm continues to deposit snow throughout the state on Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009.
AP Photo/Peter M. Fredin
FILE - In this file photo taken Saturday, Jan. 20, 2007, a woman believed to be Rochom P'ngieng, dubbed the "jungle woman," holds a wooden pole looking away at her home in Oyadao, Rattanak Kiri province, about 660 kilometers (410 miles) northeast of Phnom Penh, Cambodia. P'ngieng, dubbed the "jungle woman" after emerging, naked and unable to speak from the wilds of northeastern Cambodia two years ago, is sick and apparently suffering from mental illness, a doctor said Friday, Oct. 30, 2009.
AP Photo/Heng Sinith, File
Catriona Le May Doan, right, and Simon Whitfield run as the first torchbearers with the Olympic flame, Friday, Oct. 30, 2009, in Victoria, British Columbia. The Olympic flame which travelled all the way from Greece will now start a 106-day cross country relay which will end in Vancouver on Feb. 12, 2010, to mark the start of the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic Games.
The Canadian Press, Jonathan Hayward
Four month old elephant "Rani" and her mother "Thura" are pictured in Hagenbeck's zoo in Hamburg, northern Germany on Friday, Oct. 30, 2009.
AP Photo/Fabian Bimmer
A vendor transports marigolds by boat at a canal in Xochimilco Lake in Mexico City, Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2009. Known as "cempasuchil" in Nahuatl language and "flor de muerto" in Spanish, marigolds are purchased throughout the country each year to adorn traditional Day of the Dead altars.
AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo
The big ship paused. Then the shots were fired, with a cracking sound, in three bursts.
The bow of the $1 billion ship, built in Louisiana, contains about 7.5 tons of steel from the fallen towers.
"It's a transformation ... from something really twisted and ugly," said Rosaleen Tallon, who lost her firefighter brother, Sean, on 9/11. "I'm proud that our military is using that steel."
Tallon said her brother, who was a Marine, would have been proud.
JoAnn Atlas, of Howells, N.Y., who lost her husband, fire Lt. Gregg Atlas, draped a flag-themed banner along the fence. The names of emergency workers who died were written on the red stripes.
"We have to remember. It's a way to honor them," she said.
Members of the public included Nancy DiGiacomo, who came from Huntington, N.Y., with her husband, 9-year-old son, mother and sister.
"I just thought it was important to see" the transformation of the tragedy's wreckage, said DiGiacomo. "From that, something else can come of it."
Lt. Cmdr. Colette Murphy, a Navy spokeswoman, said she was excited for those serving on board to see the city's "awe-inspiring" welcome.
At a short ceremony later at Pier 88 near the site of the aircraft carrier, the USS Intrepid, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said the USS New York couldn't have a more fitting name, representing freedom, courage and resilience.
"This ship is actually a physical representation of that spirit with steel from the World Trade Center built into its bow so every friend that sets foot on it and every foe that dares challenge it will feel its power and know that it is literally made from the heart and soul of the city that has scarified so much," the mayor said.
Of the 361 sailors serving aboard the ship, around 13 percent are from New York state, which is higher than would normally be the case, Murphy said. There were many requests from Navy personnel to serve on the ship, which will carry some 250 Marines.
The federal government is working to erect a memorial on the crash site of one of four flights hijacked on Sept. 11, 2001, and has decided to condemn several properties after the owners refused to sell. This photo from September marks the site where Flight 93 went down in Shanksville, Pa.
The federal government is working to erect a memorial on the crash site of one of four flights hijacked on Sept. 11, 2001, and has decided to condemn several properties after the owners refused to sell. This photo from September marks the site where Flight 93 went down in Shanksville, Pa.
Gene J. Puskar, AP
Federal representatives joined a group of the victims' family members to negotiate with the landowners, but a statement obtained by the Associated Press said those negotiations had failed. Landowners disputed that there were negotiations. The seven property owners have about 500 acres that are needed for the $58 million, 2,200-acre memorial and national park. Here, visitors mark the seventh anniversary of the crash.
Gene J. Puskar, AP
After three years of contentious negotiations, a Pennsylvania landowner agreed in January to sell 274 acres to the federal government for a memorial to Flight 93. Here, a man visits a temporary memorial to that flight on Sept. 11, 2008 in Shanksville. Click through the gallery for a look back at the attacks.
Gene J. Puskar, AP
A total of four jets were hijacked by Islamic terrorists on Sept. 11, 2001. The al-Qaida-affiliated hijackers slammed two of those jets --- American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175 -- into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. Including the 19 hijackers, almost 3,000 people died in the attacks.
Peter C. Brandt, Getty Images
The towers collapsed as huge fires caused by the impact of the plane crashes spread. In the New York City attack alone, at least 2,600 people died, both on the planes and in the buildings.
AP
The terrorists commandeered another jet -- American Airlines Flight 77 -- and crashed it into the Pentagon. That attack caused extensive damage to the west face of the building, as seen here on Sept. 14, 2001, and killed at least 125 people inside the building.
Tech. Sgt. Cedric H. Rudisill, DoD / Getty Images
Flight 93 was the last plane to crash that day. The official 9/11 Commission report said the hijackers crashed the plane -- which was originally en route from Newark, N.J., to San Francisco -- as passengers tried to seize control of the cockpit. Here, investigators inspect the crater left by the impact. (Sources: AP, National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States)
Gene J. Puskar, AP
After the ground zero stop, the ship — escorted by about two dozen tugboats and other vessels — headed up the Hudson River toward the George Washington Bridge. After a U-turn there, it headed south to Pier 88. An official commissioning ceremony is scheduled for Saturday.
The New York will remain in the city through Veteran's Day and then head to Norfolk, Va., for about a year of crew training and exercises, Murphy said.
The ship is 684 feet long and can carry as many as 800 Marines. Its flight deck that can handle helicopters and the MV-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft.
It was scheduled to be built before the terrorist attacks. About a year later, the announcement came that the ship would bear the name New York to honor the city, state, and those who died.
It's the latest in a line of Navy ships to bear that name. The others included a Spanish-American War-era cruiser, a battleship that served in World Wars I and II and a nuclear submarine retired from the fleet in 1997.
The ship is technically known as a San Antonio-class amphibious dock vessel. Four vessels in that class are in service, the USS San Antonio, USS New Orleans, USS Mesa Verde and USS Green Bay. Four others are being built. Of those, two also have been named in connection with the Sept. 11 attacks.
The USS Arlington was named to honor the attack on the Pentagon. The USS Somerset was named after the county in Pennsylvania where United Airlines flight 93 crashed.
Sommelier Masahiko Mori pours a bottle of 2009 Beaujolais Nouveau into the wine spa at the Hakone Yunessun resort west of Tokyo, Japan.
Did You See That?
AP
Check out the best news photos of the week.
'Historic' Flooding
AP
Helicopters and inflatable boats rescued scores of people as floods devastated northern England's picturesque Lake District.
Torture Cover-Up?
CP
The Harper government is dismissing calls for a public inquiry into damning allegations that the military handed over prisoners to face torture in Afghanistan.
Top News Video
AP
Officials say a college student was shot to death by a hunter who says he mistook the classmates for deer.