Fact Check

Did Daisy the Dog Rescue Hundreds of 9/11 Survivors?

The tale of a dog named Daisy who rescued countless souls from World Trade Center towers on 11 September 2001 is inspiring but fabricated.

Published Nov. 6, 2001

 (johnqs/Flickr)
Image Via johnqs/Flickr
Claim:
A dog named Daisy rescued hundreds of people from the damaged World Trade Center towers on 9/11.

A blind man named James Crane, a golden retriever called Daisy, the selfless rescue of almost a thousand people from one of the collapsing World Trade Center towers — if it all sounds too good to be true, that's because it is, despite the opening line of the following example:

This is a true story which happened on 9-11-01.

James Crane worked on the 101st of Tower 1 of the World Trade Center.

He is blind so he has a golden retriever named Daisy. After the plane hit 20 stories below, James knew that he was doomed, so he let Daisy go out as an act of love. With tears in her eyes she darted away into the darkened hallway. Choking on the fumes of the jet fuel and the smoke he was just waiting to die ... About 30 minutes later, Daisy comes back along with James' boss, who Daisy just happened to pick up on floor 112.

On her first run of the building, she leads James, James' boss and about 300 more people out of the doomed building.

But she wasn't through yet, she knew there were others who were trapped. So, highly against James' wishes she ran back in the building. On her second run, she saved 392 lives. Again she went back in. During this run, the building collapses. James hears about this and falls on his knees into tears.

Against all known odds, Daisy makes it out alive, but this time she is carried by a firefighter. "She lead us right to the people, before she got injured" the fireman explained. Her final run saved other 273 lives. She suffered acute smoke inhalation, severe burns on all four paws, and a broken leg, but she saved 967 lives.

The next week, Mayor Guilaini rewards Daisy with the Canine medal of Honor of New York. Daisy is the first civilian Canine to win such an honor.

This is a case of the heroic rescue that wasn't: This widely circulated Internet tale of canine courage is pure fiction. No dog, of any type or name, rescued several hundred people from the World Trade Center towers on 9/11. One of this fictional item's more obvious tipoffs was the claim that the imaginary dog went to the 112th floor of the damaged tower to retrieve more victims in need of rescuing — an impossibility, as both World Trade Center towers topped out at 110 floors.

One version of the Internet forward concluded with "copied from NEW YORK TIMES 9-19-01." That claim is as fake as the rest of the piece: no such article ran in the New York Times or in any other publication, on that date or any other.

At least two men were guided to safety from the World Trade Center buildings by their guide dogs: Michael Hingson from the 78th floor by Roselle, and Omar Rivera from the 71st floor by Salty. Neither dog returned to those buildings to rescue others, though.

Roselle and Salty received a joint Dickin Medal for their actions on 9/11, as did a NYPD Search and Rescue dog named Appollo, but no dog was given the "Canine Medal of Honor of New York" (an award that does not exist) by New York mayor Rudy Guilaini in connect with the 9/11 attacks.

The horror that was September 11 was hard for many of us to accept at the time, thus the need for "miraculous rescue" tales such as this one ... even if they had to be invented.

Sources

Montero, David.   "Dog Guides Blind Owner Down from 78th Floor."     Inside Ventura County.   15 September 2001.

The Washington Post.   "A Breed Apart; Service Dogs Are Heroes with Fur."     11 October 2001   (p. C14).

PDSA.   "PDSA Dickin Medal."     Accessed 21 September 2017.