Christian Shank, a German immigrant, built a cabin on Stony Creek in 1798, later building a
grist mill and two
saw mills in the vicinity. Emmanuel Shaffer opened a store at the site in 1828, and the following year Shank laid out the town of Shanksville. The town was the home of John Suhre, a Union army private who was fatally wounded at the
Battle of Fredericksburg and whose last days are described in
Louisa May Alcott's short novel
Hospital Sketches. The Shanksville post office was opened in 1874. Shanksville was incorporated as a borough on January 25, 1913.
September 11 attacks and first lady
Laura Bush visit
Stonycreek Township near Shanksville on the first anniversary of the
September 11 attacks. On September 11, 2001, during the
terrorist attacks on the United States, Shanksville received worldwide attention after
United Airlines Flight 93 crashed into a field in
Stonycreek Township, north of the town of Shanksville, killing all 40
civilians and four al-Qaeda
hijackers on board. The hijackers had intended to fly the plane to
Washington, D.C. and crash it into either the
Capitol or the
White House. However, after learning from family members via airphone of the earlier attacks on the
World Trade Center and
The Pentagon, the passengers on board revolted against the hijackers and fought for control of the plane, causing it to crash. It was the only one of the four aircraft hijacked that day that never reached its intended target. There are two memorials to the event. The original, temporary
Flight 93 National Memorial to the passengers and crew of Flight 93 was located on a hill, about from the crash site. On July 8, 2010, a new temporary entrance and memorial were opened at an area called "the Western Overlook". It is where the FBI set up their command center and where family members first saw the aftermath of the crash, bringing their own memorials, and where visitors can leave them today. The initial phase of permanent construction of the Flight 93 National Memorial, including the visitors' center, was completed by the 10th anniversary in 2011. The memorial is built around the crash site, following the plane's flight path, and protecting the area of impact, known as the "Sacred Ground", which remains protected and accessible only to family members of the passengers and crew. Shanksville's
volunteer firefighters and emergency personnel from the nearby towns of Central City,
Somerset, and others rushed to the crash scene to search for survivors. Members of the
New York City Fire Department donated to the
Shanksville Volunteer Fire Department a cross-shaped piece of steel salvaged from the
World Trade Center. Mounted atop a
Pentagon-shaped base, it was installed outside the firehouse and dedicated on August 24, 2008. ==Government==