Thursday, September 22, 2011

Read Aloud Thursday // The Little Chapel that Stood and Fireboat

In our country, we recently remembered the tenth anniversary of the tragedy of September 11. I will be completely honest with you - I have actively avoided discussing this with my children. How to handle it, how to explain it, how to give it the gravity that it deserved yet be appropriate for their ages. It overwhelmed me, as did the tragedy itself.

However, this year I spotted two books via Elizabeth Foss' blog and immediately popped them into my Amazon cart and ordered them. Money well spent as they were wonderful resources this year and I plan to return to them many, many times in the future.



The Little Chapel that Stood is the story of a small church in New York City that is located near where the Twin Towers once stood. The story starts with the history of the building - George Washington and Alexander Hamilton both attended here. The church has been a refuge for Americans during the depression and for immigrants new to our country. The book then eases into the story of 9/11 and tells how once again this small church was a refuge and sanctuary for those that worked tirelessly to rescue those trapped in the Twin Towers. Written as a poem, it is a gentle way to tell of the sacrifice of the emergency workers who served our country that day. It touches on the concept of freedom and why it is so important and worth fighting for.



The second book was Fireboat. This is the story of an old fireboat that had served New York City for many years on the Hudson River. In 1931, the John J. Harvey fireboat was launched and it was the shiniest, fastest and largest fireboat of them all. It fought fires on the river for years, but New York city began to change and the fireboat wasn't as needed anymore. It was going to be sold as scrap when a group of friends bought it in 1995 and restored it to it's original working order for fun. However, on September 11, the John J. Harvey was an important piece in the rescue operations - shuttling people across the river safety and pumping water to the firetrucks when they could get to water pipes because they were broken and buried under the city's rubble. A true story that tells how even this small, seemingly insignificant, boat made a difference on 9/11.

One other link to share regarding September 11. Candace at His Mercy is New posted resources for a 9/11 study and lapbook for children to do. I'm bookmarking this for next year for the girls and we'll tackle this a little more in depth now that they have had some introduction to it this year.

Linking up with Amy at Hope is the Word for Read Aloud Thursday. I hope these resource will help you as you look for resource to share this story of tragedy and triumph with your children.

3 comments:

  1. Wow, what neat books! Thanks for sharing about them. I am going to check those out! We explained what happened on 9/11 to our 5 yr old, though tried to keep it simple. And I'm not really even sure how much he understood.

    ReplyDelete
  2. What AWESOME resources!

    I haven't talked about these with my kids either but when the anniversary rolls around next year, I think my oldest will be ready. Throwing these on my Amazon wishlist so that I remember to snatch them up before 9/11 visits again.

    Thanks so much for mentioning these!

    ReplyDelete
  3. What AWESOME resources!

    I haven't talked about these with my kids either but when the anniversary rolls around next year, I think my oldest will be ready. Throwing these on my Amazon wishlist so that I remember to snatch them up before 9/11 visits again.

    Thanks so much for mentioning these!

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for commenting!

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