Peter
J. Ganci, Jr.
28th Chief of Department
Laid
to Rest
on September 15, 2001
A
Leader With Modesty
The thing about Peter J. Ganci was, he didn't flaunt it. He
was just a regular guy living with his family on Long Island,
so at peace with himself that if you asked him what he did for
a living, he would just say, "I'm a fireman in the city." "He
would never say that he was the highest-ranking uniformed officer
in the department," said Fire Marshal Steven Mosiello, his longtime
friend and executive assistant. Most of the time, Pete Ganci,
who was 54, was that regular guy down the street who happened
to be a decorated hero and boss: the guy who loved to laugh,
golf, go clamming in Great South Bay. On Deputy Fire Commissioner
Lynn Tierney's desk is a photograph of him in formal uniform
— five stars on his collar and all — and a pink headband that
says "Happy Birthday." The photograph's meaning is simple, she
said: "He was man enough to wear a pink headband that said `Happy
Birthday.'" Then there were those times when Pete Ganci was
Chief Ganci, as on that last morning. In the eerie calm between
the collapse of the two towers, Deputy Fire Commissioner Michael
Regan recalled, "Pete Ganci directed every civilian and every
firefighter to go north. He went south." Profile published in
THE NEW YORK TIMES on January 22, 2002. September 13, 2001 Peter
Ganci, Top Fire Chief, Dies at 54 in Tower Collapse By GLENN
COLLINS Peter J. Ganci, the New York City Fire Department's
highest-ranking uniformed officer, died on Tuesday in the collapse
of the World Trade Center towers. He was 54. His death was confirmed
yesterday by Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani and Fire Commissioner
Thomas Von Essen. Chief Ganci, who held the title chief of department,
had been working his multichannel radio, standing at the center
of the smoky chaos in front of 1 World Trade Center on Tuesday
and personally commanding the rescue efforts when the building
collapsed.
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