Engagement Pathway

Local Memorial Engagement

A Distributed Model for Active Remembrance in Your Own Community

The national story of September 11 exists throughout communities across the country — through local memorials, tribute sites, artifacts, stories, and acts of remembrance. With more than 1,100 memorials distributed across the United States, most schools, organizations, families, and communities exist within reachable proximity of a site connected to the legacy of September 11.

Schools Families Community Organizations Civic Groups All Audiences

About This Pathway

Remembrance Is Closer Than You Think

The Local Memorial Engagement Pathway transforms remembrance from something geographically distant into something locally accessible, participatory, and ongoing. Rather than treating memorials solely as static monuments or destinations for annual observance, this pathway positions them as active entry points into civic engagement, reflection, historical inquiry, and community participation.

In this model, a local memorial isn't the endpoint of engagement — it is the beginning of a larger participatory process. People are more likely to carry memory forward when they have personally engaged with it through action, reflection, service, creativity, or community involvement.

Memorial Finder

Find a Memorial in Your Community

Over 1,100 9/11 memorials exist across the United States. Use the map to find one near you — in your town, your school district, or within driving distance of where you live or work.

Open the interactive map

Browse the full interactive map to locate nearby memorials, explore their histories, and connect with local remembrance communities across the country.

  • 1,168Memorials mapped nationwide
  • 51States & territories represented
  • NearbyMost people live within driving distance of one
Open the Memorial Map

Live memorial count

How the Pathway Works

Five Phases of Engagement

The pathway moves through five phases. You may enter at any point depending on your context. Each phase activates a stage of the Active Remembrance engagement model.

The Active Remembrance Loop

Your Participation Feeds the Platform

What you discover and create during this pathway doesn't stop with you. Your contributions become part of the national archive — accessible to the next school, family, or community organization that discovers a memorial in their area.

Discover Your Memorial

Use the memorial finder to locate a 9/11 tribute site in your community. Research its history and the stories behind it.

Find a Memorial

Collect and Document

Interview a local first responder. Photograph the memorial. Research how it came to exist. Document what you find.

Submit a StoryComing Soon

Contribute to the Archive

Submit your documentation, photographs, and oral history recordings to the primary source archive for future participants.

Add to the ArchiveComing Soon

Cross-Environment Adaptability

Works Across Every Audience

Schools

Students engage through research, reflection, creativity, memorial visitation, and civic inquiry connected to their local community.

Community Organizations

Groups facilitate public engagement, volunteerism, storytelling initiatives, and memorial stewardship.

Corporations

Organizations participate through service initiatives, resilience programming, community partnerships, and civic leadership efforts.

Memorial Foundations

Sites become active centers for education, participation, and local remembrance programming.

Families & Individuals

Participants engage independently through memorial visits, storytelling, reflection, volunteerism, and intergenerational participation.

Faith Communities

Gather for reflection and volunteerism connected to nearby memorial sites. Format guide coming soon.

Long-Term Vision

A Distributed National Culture of Remembrance

As participants across schools, communities, organizations, and families engage with memorials in their regions, the country itself increasingly becomes a connected civic classroom in which groups and individuals actively sustain remembrance through ongoing acts of engagement and stewardship.

Local or focused participation strengthens national continuity. People are more likely to carry memory forward when they have personally engaged with it through action, reflection, service, creativity, or community involvement.

Participation invites connection; connection inspires stewardship; stewardship paves the way toward continuity.

Related Curriculum

Lessons Connected to This Pathway

Lessons from all five pillars connect to the Local Memorial Engagement pathway. History lessons provide the context for what you find. Heroism and Resilience lessons connect to the stories behind local memorials.

Lessons Coming September 11, 2026

Curriculum lessons connected to all five pillars are being developed for the 25th anniversary. Check back as content rolls out through the summer.