Official commemorations are under way to commemorate 20 years since the 9/11 attacks against the US.
The ceremony in New York started with a minute’s silence at 08:46 EST (13:46 BST) – the exact time the first plane hit the North Tower of the World Trade Center in 2001.
Thousands of people across the US have gathered to mark the sombre occasion.
President Joe Biden will travel to all three attack sites on Saturday – New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia.
A minute’s silence also marked the moment the second plane crashed into the South Tower of the World Trade Center. Similar tributes will take place at the times when a third jet struck the Pentagon in Virginia, a fourth hijacked plane crashed into a field in Pennsylvania, and finally when the World Trade Center towers collapsed.
In total, 2,977 people died in the attacks, when al-Qaeda militants hijacked US passenger planes and crashed them.
‘The darkest days of our lives’
The first person to start reading out the names of the victims was Mike Low, who lost his daughter in the attack.
Speaking solemnly, he thanked those who helped him and his family get through “the darkest days of our lives”.
Mr Low recalled the “grey and black world” of New York in the aftermath of the attack, and asked for 9/11 to be remembered “not as numbers or a date, but the faces of ordinary people”.
Relatives took turns to read names of victims, as well as emotional messages to their own loved ones who died.
Earlier on Saturday, a vigil was held at the Fire Department of New York memorial wall – a 56-foot-long bronze wall that honours the 343 firefighters who died on the day of the attacks.
In total, 441 first responders died in the attacks, the largest loss of emergency personnel in American history.
“We honour all those who risked and gave their lives in the minutes, hours, months and years afterwards,” Mr Biden said in his speech on Friday.