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A young
electrician who was killed during his second day on the job at the World
Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001 was honored Saturday when the street
in front of his family's Woodside apartment was renamed in his honor.
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City Councilman Eric
Gioia joins the family and girlfriend of Tommy Ashton in renaming part
of 47th Avenue in Woodside after the electrician who was killed on Sept.
11, 2001. |
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47th Ave. named for Woodside electrician
By Ayala Ben-Yehuda 04/10/2003
Tommy Ashton, 21, was remembered on 47th Avenue in the Big
Six Towers apartment complex by family and friends as an accomplished
athlete and youth mentor at St. Sebastian’s Church and Archbishop
Molloy High School, his alma maters.
“Tommy truly was a gift to us,” said his older sister, Colleen
Ashton, recalling her brother’s honesty, sense of humor and devotion
to family.
“He truly inspired me to be a better person,” she said.
Tommy Ashton was an altar boy at St. Sebastian’s, where he played
basketball and baseball. He became a competitive swimmer, serving as
captain of the Flushing Flyers and Molloy swim teams.
He was a peer group leader at Molloy and a political science major at
St. Francis College in Brooklyn before becoming an electrician in July
2001 and enrolling in night classes to finish his degree.
Ashton agreed to coach the swim team at St. Sebastian’s just days
before he was killed. A memorial scholarship has been established in
his name at Molloy High School.
Ashton’s parents, John and Kathy, unveiled the new street sign
that reads “Thomas J. Ashton Way” just outside the apartment
building where they still live. They were surrounded by family and supporters
including members of their son’s electricians’ union, IBEW
Local 3.
City Councilman Eric Gioia (D-Woodside) said the street sign was “the
very least the city could do” to memorialize those lost on Sept.
11.
“The courage you have shown has just been extraordinary,”
Gioia told the Ashton family.
“This memorial will celebrate his life,” said Community
Board 2 Chairman Joseph Conley. “Not his duration, but his donation
to the community.”
U.S. Rep. Joseph Crowley (D-Jackson Heights) paid tribute to the close-knit,
patriotic community of Woodside, which he said had “produced many
Tommy Ashtons in its day.”
Crowley said his district had lost more than 100 people in the attacks
on the World Trade Center and that the Ashtons had been leaders among
victims’ families.
Rob McKenna, who coached Ashton in basketball at St. Sebastian's, honored
him by adopting a son and naming him after Ashton.
McKenna urged the crowd to “say hi to Tommy every time you pass
this way. I know I will.”
Reach reporter Ayala Ben-Yehuda by e-mail at Timesledger@aol.com or
call 1-718-229-0300, Ext. 146.
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