Statue of Liberty Reopens 8 Months After Sandy

A large crowd gathered for the holiday and ribbon-cutting ceremony on Liberty Island

The Statue of Liberty finally reopened on the Fourth of July, months after Sandy swamped Liberty Island. Brian Thompson reports.

The Statue of Liberty finally reopened on the Fourth of July, months after superstorm Sandy swamped Liberty Island.
 
A large crowd gathered for the holiday and ribbon-cutting ceremony with federal officials and Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Lines stretched blocks long for the boat, which left from Battery Park in Manhattan starting at 8:30 a.m. Thursday.
 
Rodney and Judy Long, of Charlotte, N.C., were the first people in line for the boat called Lady Liberty. They couldn't get tickets to climb up to the top of the statue, but they were just glad to be there for the big reopening, they said.
 
"It's perfect timing for it to reopen. It's really a symbol for what the country is all about,'' Rodney Long said.
 
Heather and Chris Leykam traveled to the statue from Brooklyn with their three kids: Avril, 7, Delilah, whose 6th birthday is Thursday, and Finn, 1. The family thought it would be great to celebrate Delilah's birthday at the Statue of Liberty.
 
"This to us, Liberty Island, is really about a rebirth,'' said Heather Leykam, whose mother's home in Breezy Point was destroyed during Sandy. "It is a sense of renewal for the city and the country.''
 
Some repairs to brick walkways and docks are still underway, but much of work has been completed since Sandy swamped most of the 12 acres of the national landmark.

The statue was spared in the fall storm, but Lady Liberty's little island took a serious beating. Railings broke, docks and paving stones were torn up and buildings were flooded. The storm destroyed electrical systems, sewage pumps and boilers. Hundreds of National Park Service workers from as far away as California and Alaska spent weeks cleaning mud and debris.

The tiny island was decorated with star-spangled bunting Thursday, but some parts remain blocked off, and the main ferry dock was boarded up.

Parks workers greeted visitors with: "We are so glad to see you!"

The visitors said they were impressed.

"It's stunning, it's beautiful," said Elizabeth Bertero, of California's Sonoma County. "They did a great job rebuilding. You don't really notice that anything happened."

Visitors to Lady Liberty will go through security on lower Manhattan, after city officials criticized an earlier plan to screen them at neighboring Ellis Island, which endured far worse damage to its infrastructure.

Officials said Thursday that Ellis Island is expected to open sometime in the fall.

The damage to both islands was put at $59 million.

--Brian Thompson contributed reporting
 

Copyright The Associated Press
Exit mobile version