NEWTOWN, Conn. ā I arrived here late, 10 years ago, in the afternoon on Dec. 14, 2012, and spent that day and the next month or so reporting from a community shell-shocked from the massacre of 20 children and six adults at the elementary school behind the firehouse.
The images here are just some of the hundreds I took with my phone while I was reporting on the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, shuffling from press briefing to press briefing, makeshift memorial to makeshift memorial, funeral to funeral.
When schools reopened, children arriving on buses waved to the hundreds of reporters, television trucks and camera crews that had descended on Newtown. After the first week following the killings, the crush of media mostly faded. But the healing process, often grueling, continued on.
āNewtown was a private, quiet place before the shooting,ā Sen. Chris Murphy, one of the first lawmakers to arrive at the firehouse that day, once told me. āAnd it still is. Newtown is not a place you move to if you want to be showy, if you want to lead a big public life. And so Newtownās recovery has been private and quiet as well.ā
A few years after the shootings, a woman who came across a photo gallery I had posted online sent me an email asking if she could use some of the images for a PowerPoint presentation she was doing for a school safety program she had created. It was the mother of Josephine Gay, one the children killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
āHard to say what it meant to stumble upon your photos,ā Michelle Gay wrote. āThere were so many that were taken of us in horrible moments ā but yours capture the dignity and beauty of our community and the initial outpouring of love and support.ā