Remembering the Dogs of 9/11

Read on to learn all about the top dogs at Ground Zero & other emergency sites around the US on 9/11 & how they used their skills & courage to save lives.

Volunteer firefighters, police officers, and rescue workers from around the world rushed to the aid of New York City and Washington D.C. in the days following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Among these heroes were some of the four-legged variety—dog heroes. This Patriot Day, we pay tribute to these noble hero dogs and their courageous handlers.

Riley

Iconic photos of Riley being transported alone through the onsite debris have been shared thousands of times since 2001. This search and rescue Golden Retriever was formally trained to locate survivors of the attacks, desperately searching the World Trade Center as part of FEMA’s Pennsylvania Task Force 1. His image as a beacon of hope at Ground Zero brought motivation and comfort to the firefighters and police officers tirelessly working through the tragedy.

Riley provided his owner, Chris Selfridge, and his nation, with over 13 years of love and support. Riley’s passing in 2010 helped inspire a study of the long-term effects of rigorous search and rescue work on canine health.

Apollo

German Shepherd Appollo graduated from the NYPD Canine Special Operations Division when he was two years old. He was one of New York City’s top dogs throughout the 1990s and worked with the first NYPD K-9 Urban Search and Rescue team. Apollo and his handler, Peter Davis, were the first K-9 search and rescue team to answer the call on September 11, arriving at the South Tower just 15 minutes after its collapse.

From that moment on, Appollo looked for survivors 18 hours a day for weeks on end. His search and rescue work earned him one of the first AKC Humane Fund Awards for Canine Excellence (ACE) in 2001, as well as the Dickin Medal on behalf of all Patriot Day search and rescue dogs, awarded “for tireless courage in the service of humanity during the search and rescue operations in New York and Washington on and after 11 September 2001.”

Sage

Sage was two years old when the search-and-rescue Border Collie and her handler, Diane Whetsel, worked at the Pentagon after the 9/11 attacks. With the highest-level recognition from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Sage was one of the nation’s top 50 dogs in the search-and-rescue field. She and her handler continued their careers in SAR by rescuing animals stranded by Hurricane Rita and Katrina before their Iraq deployment in 2007.

Once retired, Sage participated in the 9/11 search-and-rescue dog study done by the University of Pennsylvania, funded by the AKC Canine Health Foundation. She was also honored with the 2009 Search and Rescue Award for Canine Excellence before crossing the Rainbow Bridge in 2012 at 13.

Bretagne

Bretagne (Brit-nee) was known as the last living search and rescue dog to have worked at Ground Zero. Bretagne and her owner-handler Denise Corliss worked 12-hour shifts on rescue and recovery for 10 days straight after the attacks on September 11. This Golden Retriever’s career training began at just eight weeks old, making her a lifelong veteran of rescue missions, including Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Ivan.

After retiring from the workforce at age nine, Bretagne took her talents to a local elementary school, where she helped first-graders as a reading assistance dog for her remaining years. At the age of 16, Bretagne crossed the Rainbow Bridge with her owners by her side in Texas, where she was saluted by representatives from the armed forces and local fire departments.

Trakr

Trakr was a German Shepherd who answered the call for action that fateful day with his Canadian police officer and handler James Symington. The duo is credited with finding the last remaining survivor from the World Trade Center after she had been trapped for 26 hours. TIME awarded Trakr with the sixth spot on their published list of Top 10 Heroic Animals.

Seven years later, Symington entered Trakr in a BioArts International contest where the winner’s DNA would be cloned. Trakr had what it took as an exceptional canine specimen and was cloned five times before his passing in 2009 at the age of 14. The Trakr puppy clones (Trustt, Solace, Valor, Prodigy, and Deja Vu) continue Trakr’s legacy, and all started their training as search and rescue dogs in 2011.

Did you know that our own, Robert, Michele, and Nicole, named a litter of sled dog puppies born on September 11 after some of these heroes? One of this named Bretange (Bre Bee by her owner) is a service dog working for a young man with autism. You can find out more about their mushing team at TeamIneka.com

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