Beyond the staggering number of lives lost, the billions in assets wiped out, the wreckage of subway lines and so on, there were other holes to deal with: entire firefighting crews, and quite a few at or near the top of the ranks in the fire and police departments died in the collapse. New Yorkers - and many from around the world - rallied to the rescue effort under the compassionate yet firm leadership of Giuliani. Suddenly, few wanted to see him go, though he was precluded by law for running for a third term in the elections (whose primaries, ironically, had been scheduled for September 11th).
The man who did eventually take control, new Republican mayor Michael Bloomberg (an ex-Democrat to boot), has a yeoman's task ahead. Rebuilding the city will take a long while; restoring shaken faith and economic fortune will take more than just time - and it's not as if the city's other problems have gone away, just taken a back seat and been put in slightly different perspective. Still, if any city is resilient enough to weather the damage and bounce back, clearly it's New York. -- location id = 39603 -->
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Early days and colonial rule Media
Revolution
Immigration and civil war
The late nineteenth century
Turn-of-the-nineteenth-century development
The war years and the Depression: 1914-45
The postwar years
The Giuliani years
September 11, 2001, and beyond