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MY COUNTRY LIFE

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< My son-in-law, Ke
Thursday, September 7, 2006
My moment of sile >
Monday, September 11, 2006
September 2006
Saturday Six
The hay is in the barn.
Hay there...
I'm glad we don't farm for a living
So, which book shall I read first?
a special Internet friend
Monday Photo Shoot
Yeah, it's my youngest granddaughter...
The Sunday Seven
The Saturday Six from Patrick
in bed
things we've seen on our little road trips
Tagged by Carlene
God does talk to me sometimes
journals that make me think
a meme
my blood pressure is falling!
One more entry on the WC tractor
a story about my Monday Photo Shoot entry
Monday Photo Shoot
odds and ends from the past few days
Reading to Cliff
Songs my parents used to sing
around our 43 acres
weekend assignment
about my previous post
I went postal tonight
Ride with me!
Sadie is behaving better
While watching the credits on CSI....
Monday Photo Shoot
A fun-filled three days
My moment of silence is over
I remember Christopher Sullivan...
My son-in-law, Kevin
Weekend Assignment #128... Five Years On
Best-laid plans oft go astray
the last of the Old Thresher Reunion pictures
An old Indian joke
Kevin is out of surgery
I love simple songs
a few more scenes from Old Threshers' Reunion
Monday photo shoot
Old Threshers' Reunion
Great food!
about the Hispanic "Indian"
things for sale
Church at the Threshers' campground on Saturday morning
If you don't care for antique tractors, feel free to ignore this entry
lousy timing, all the way
« September 2006 Archive
Saturday, September 9, 2006
8:31:00 AM EDT
Feeling Chillin'

I remember Christopher Sullivan...

                                                  

Chris Sullivan sounds like an ordinary, very contented, man.

He married his high-school sweetheart, and they had two sons: Sean, aged six back in 2001, when September 11 rolled around, and Brian, aged four at the time.

Lieutenant Sullivan, 39, was a firefighter at Ladder 11 and Engine 214 in Brooklyn.  A big man at 6-foot-4 and 235 pounds, Sullivan wore a flat-top haircut and carried a muscular build from years of weight lifting.

"The main thing about him was that he was an excellent father," his wife said. "He'd come home after working 24 hours and the boys would want to play, and he played. He took them hiking and camping. He also did everything at home, from cooking to cleaning. We were a real team. The kids didn't have their Dad long, but they got a lot from him"

"Chris had a heart of gold, but no one pushed him around," said his dad, "which made him perfect for firefighting. He loved his job so much. We really respected the men he worked with."

Chris' brother, Robert, said Chris will be remembered as an all-around family man who cooked and cared for his sons on days he didn't have to go to the firehouse and for his positive outlook, strong faith in God and penchant for practical jokes. "Every day, he lived life to the fullest," Robert Sullivan said. "You couldn't rattle the guy that easy. He was just easygoing and enjoyed things."  Robert said his brother would have been philosophical about death and the days ahead. "I think he would say we shouldn't worry about the guys who died, that God would take care of them," he added. "He would say that we need to focus on the country, stick together and do what's right."

"When all is said and done, if my brother had to do that again, he would," said Robert.  "That's the kind of guy he was."

Chris was last seen September 11 racing up the stairs inside One World Trade Center with members of Engine Co. 214 to help evacuate those still inside. He is believed to have perished when the tower collapsed.

Chris had decided to grow pumpkins for the first time in 2001, and his family used the resulting produce to make pumpkin bread on Thanksgiving.

What a gaping hole was left in so many lives when Chris was taken from this world in the World Trade Center disaster. Indeed, what a loss to the world, to have someone like this man die at so young an age.


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