A Moment in Time Captured in Pieces

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The instrument itself is a two-tone Oyster Perpetual Datejust, with a 41-millimeter case, an unusual grooved dial of 18-karat gold, a gold-and-silver Jubilee bracelet and a signature flip-lock clasp. It is a chronometer, which is to say a precision watch that enables its wearer to measure elapsed time, not in the way a stopwatch might, but with great accuracy. It is a Rolex, one of millions of wristwatches produced over the decades by this notable producer of high-end timepieces, and when originally sold it cost roughly $7,700.

Smashed now, charred and fragmented, missing its crystal, the sweep-second hand and what would appear to be the minute hand and also half the bracelet, the watch still tells time, in a sense, but only one time. Frozen in a small indicator window of Todd Beamer’s Rolex is the number 11. That was the date in September 2001 when four terrorists hijacked United Airlines Flight 93 and crashed it into a reclaimed strip mine near Shanksville, Pa., killing Mr. Beamer and all onboard.

Of the 800 or so recovered artifacts on view at the National September 11 Memorial Museum, many relate to the telling of time. There are crucial timeline reconstructions of the day’s events. “Time as a concept, as in timepieces, is a consistent thread” in any historical rendering of the events of that fateful day, said Jan Seidler Ramirez, chief curator and director of collections at the museum.

“So, yes, there’s the Beamer watch, which takes on a whole aura because his particular story is quite well known,” Ms. Ramirez added. “But there are also other timepieces that speak to that timeline and narrative in another way, since everybody more or less wears a watch, this intimate object that has touched the body.”

Beamer’s battered watch a key piece for 9/11 Memorial Museum

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The instrument itself is a two-tone Oyster Perpetual Datejust, with a 41- millimeter case, an unusual grooved dial of 18-karat gold, a gold and silver bracelet and a signature flip-lock clasp. It is a Rolex, one of millions of wristwatches produced through the decades by the notable manufacturer, and it cost roughly $7,700 new. Smashed now, charred and fragmented, missing its crystal, the watch still tells time, in a sense.

The instrument itself is a two-tone Oyster Perpetual Datejust, with a 41- millimeter case, an unusual grooved dial of 18-karat gold, a gold and silver bracelet and a signature flip-lock clasp.

It is a Rolex, one of millions of wristwatches produced through the decades by the notable manufacturer, and it cost roughly $7,700 new.

Smashed now, charred and fragmented, missing its crystal, the watch still tells time, in a sense.

Frozen in a small indicator window of Todd Beamer�s Rolex is the number 11. That was the date in September 2001 when four terrorists hijacked United Airlines Flight 93 and crashed it into a reclaimed strip mine near Shanksville, Pa., killing Beamer and everyone else onboard.

Of the 800 or so recovered artifacts on view at the 9/11 Memorial Museum, many relate to the telling of time. There are crucial timeline reconstructions of the day�s events.

�Time as a concept, as in timepieces, is a consistent thread� in any historical rendering of the events of that day, said Jan Seidler Ramirez, chief curator and director of collections at the museum.

�So, yes, there�s the Beamer watch, which takes on a whole aura because his particular story is quite well-known,� Ramirez added. �But there are also other timepieces that speak to that timeline and narrative in another way.�

There is a wall clock from the offices of the Department of the Navy at the Pentagon. There is an antique chronometer that Richard Guadagno, a 38-year-old biologist, was wearing as he returned home after a trip to New Jersey.

But there is also a dainty wristwatch worn by Margaret L. Benson, a 52-year-old Port Authority worker last seen alive outside a Borders bookstore adjacent to the twin towers. By all accounts, Peggy Benson was a no-frills woman whose single vanity was her watch.

Each timepiece is symbolically resonant, and yet Beamer�s shattered Rolex has been an object of deep fascination for many of the museum�s 720,000 visitors � perhaps because it carries an extra freight of meaning.

Unlike so many who committed heroic acts that day, those who died and disappeared and those who survived, the 32-year-old Oracle executive and father is remembered widely for a battle cry.

�Let�s roll!� were Beamer�s last recorded words, uttered as he and his fellow passengers made a brave if futile attempt to overpower al-Qaida operative Ziad Jarrah and his fellow terrorists.

Like so many relics at the museum, Beamer�s Rolex evokes something intimate by providing both a record of a death and a window into a life.

�It�s an anthropological constant that we relate to our memories through things,� said Felicity Bodenstein, an associate lecturer at the University of Paris, Sorbonne, who has written extensively on secular relics.

When we contemplate an object such as Beamer�s Rolex, she added, �Because it is immediate, because it is sensory, we are allowed to enter directly into a personal, intimate relationship with a historical figure.�

And in the case of a figure such as Beamer, a surviving relic functions �as a passport into a moment in time,� Bodenstein said � one rendered more powerful because it records the instant when time seemed to stop.

It would be more than a decade after the 9/11 attack before the watch came into the museum�s possession. Like many other relics in the collection, it was lent by a family member � Beamer�s wife, Lisa � along with one of his business cards recovered from wreckage scattered widely near the former Diamond T strip mine in Stony Creek Township.

Professional detachment is a great difficulty for those charged with handling objects such as the open-toed Kenneth Cole pumps that Florence Jones wore to escape the World Trade Center; Giovanna Galletta Gambale�s wallet, with its LensCrafters coupon and Banana Republic credit card; or Beamer�s watch.

�There are these moments when you�ll come to the next object, and, for whatever reason, it has a significant impact,� said museum conservator John Childs. �The watch, because of whose watch it was, has an important resonance. Frankly, I�m not going to talk about what it means that it was recovered because I don�t want to go there in my own mind.�

Pompeo got $5,800 whisky gift from Japan, but where is it?

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FILE – In this Nov. 26, 2019 file photo, then Secretary of State Mike Pompeo smiles as he speaks with reporters at the State Department in Washington. The State Department says it’s looking into the the apparent disappearance of a nearly $6,000 bottle of whisky given to former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo by the government of Japan. In a notice filed in the Federal Register on Wednesday, the department said it could find no trace of the bottle’s whereabouts and that there is an “ongoing inquiry” into what happened to the booze., Secretary of State Mike Pompeo smiles as he speaks with reporters at the State Department in Washington. The State Department says it’s looking into the the apparent disappearance of a nearly $6,000 bottle of whisky given to former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo by the government of Japan. In a notice filed in the Federal Register on Wednesday, the department said it could find no trace of the bottle’s whereabouts and that there is an “ongoing inquiry” into what happened to the booze. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The State Department said Wednesday it’s looking into the apparent disappearance of a nearly $6,000 bottle of whisky given more than two years ago to then-Secretary of State Mike Pompeo by the government of Japan. Pompeo knows nothing about the gift or an inquiry, a representative said.

In a notice filed in the Federal Register, the department said it could find no trace of the bottle’s whereabouts and that there is an “ongoing inquiry” into what happened to the booze. The department reported the investigation in its annual accounting of gifts given to senior U.S. officials by foreign governments and leaders.

The department’s Office of Protocol is required to record gifts given to U.S. officials and keep track of their disposition. Recipients have the option of turning gifts of a certain value over to the National Archives or another government entity or purchasing them for personal use by reimbursing the Treasury Department for their value.

The Japanese whisky was valued at $5,800 and was presented to Pompeo in June 2019, presumably when he visited the country that month for a Group of 20 summit that was also attended by President Donald Trump. But unlike other gifts, the department said there was no record of what had become of the bottle.

“The department is looking into the matter and has an ongoing inquiry,” it said in the Federal Register notice. The notice offered no additional detail. A representative for Pompeo said Pompeo “has no knowledge of the gift and has not been contacted by anyone regarding an investigation of it.”

Pompeo also reported receiving two carpets worth a total of $19,400 from the president of Kazakhstan and the foreign minister of the United Arab Emirates. Both floor coverings were transferred to the General Services Administration, the notice said.

The filing said Trump and his wife, Melania, received more than $120,000 worth of presents from foreign leaders in 2019, compared with $88,200 the year before. In Trump’s first year in office, in 2017, they reported receiving more than $140,000 in gifts.

There was no significant common theme to the 2019 gifts. At least three foreign leaders — from Australia, Egypt and Vietnam — presented Trump with photographs or portraits of himself that collectively were valued at more than $10,000.

Trump received a painting of himself on “dual pane glass” from then-Vietnamese President Nguyen Phu Trong that was worth an estimated $5,250, according to the filing. It also says Trump got a “large double frame carved from black stone with image of President Donald J. Trump in precious metal on one side and the coat of arms of Egypt on the reverse” worth $4,450 from Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison gave Trump a framed photo of himself and his wife worth $470.

Other more expensive gifts Trump received included an Ottoman Empire rifle valued at $8,500 from the prime minister of Bulgaria, a bronze sculpture of an Arabian horse from the crown prince of Bahrain worth $7,200 and a gold, onyx, emerald and diamond statue of an Arabian oryx worth $6,300 from the emir of Qatar.

All of those gifts, including the portraits and photograph, were turned over to the National Archives, according to the report.

Another significant recipient of gifts was now-retired Gen. Joseph Votel, commander of U.S. Central Command until March 2019; that command oversees American military operations in the Middle East. The government of Qatar lavished Votel with nearly $37,000 in luxury watches in 2019, including one Rolex timepiece valued at $14,995, according to the report. Votel turned those watches over to the GSA.